Magic Leap AR Headset Hands-on Offers Details on Field of View, Weight & Content

In a surprise move, Magic Leap finally released images and info regarding their upcoming Magic Leap One AR headset today. Hard specs are still thin on the ground at the moment, but it appears that press embargoes on information are finally being lifted as the company looks forward to an official release of its Creator Edition headset in 2018. Magic Leap gave Rolling Stone the rock star treatment in their exclusive tour of the headquarters, which includes a hands-on with the headset.

With a few stipulations about what Rolling Stone reporter Brian Crecente could talk about, he was able to share a few details about the physical form of the AR headset from his trip to the company’s headquarters in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. There, he was given a one hour-long demo using Magic Leap tech.

The Hardware

According to Crecente, the headset is “lightweight, modern-looking, if not exactly stylish,” adding that it’s “certainly much sleeker than anything virtual reality has to offer.”

The headband is said to hold the goggles in place using what the company calls a ‘crown temple’ design.

To put on the goggles, a person holds either side of the plastic crown in their hands and pulls apart. The crown spreads apart into a left, right and back piece. Then you slide it onto your head like a headband.

A small oval which appears to be a speaker can be seen in the image below. Rolling Stone reports the headset contains a “tiny, high-end speakers built into the temples of the device,” which provides spatial audio.

Lightwear’s field of view (FOV) is a different story. Crecente compares it to a “a VHS tape held in front of you with your arms half extended.”

image courtesy Magic Leap

Two cables come out of the back of the headband and merge into one, Rolling Stone reports. The cables measure four or five feet in length before connecting to the system’s mobile computer, aka ‘Lightpack’. The Lightpack is composed of two rounded ‘pods’ “connected smoothly on one end to form a gap between them.”

Crecente says the 6DoF motion controller is a “rounded bit of plastic that sits comfortably in your hand and features an array of buttons,” including a touchpad and haptic feedback.

The Lightwear and Lightpack are almost toy-like in their design, not because they feel cheap – they don’t – but because they’re so light and there seems to be so little to them.

The precise nature of the display tech that the headset is using is unknown, however Crecente interestingly says that objects didn’t look transparent (a major challenge with AR displays), which means either a very bright display (and/or a demo in a very dim room), or a totally unique display which can make opaque pixels. The latter seemed to be what Magic Leap was hoping to achieve in the early days of their development, but various reports suggest that tech hasn’t materialized.

You can read more about today’s Magic Leap One announcement here.

The Demo

It’s uncertain if Rolling Stone actually got a hands-on with a Creator Edition headset, or an earlier prototype, but it’s clear Magic Leap has developed a few key demos to best show off their tech.

Crecente’s hour-long demo took place first in a testing facility separate from the headquarters, which included the sort of ‘4D’ experiences that might find their ways into theme parks, and later in the main building.

This first, over-sized demo dropped me into a science fiction world, playing out an entire scene that was, in this one case, augmented with powerful, hidden fans, building-shaking speakers and an array of computer-controlled, colorful lighting. It was a powerful experience, which showed how a theme park could craft rides with no walls or waits. Most importantly, it took place among the set-dressing of the stage, the real world props that cluttered the ground and walls around me and while it didn’t look indistinguishable from reality, it was close. To see the physical world around me, and then those creations appearing not on it, as if some sort of animated sticker, but in it, was startling.

Magic Leap One Creator Edition, image courtesy Magic Leap

Heading back to the main building into a room styled to look like a normal living room, Crecente got into the nitty-gritty of the headset’s day-to-day functions:

The demo area also gave me a chance to try a half dozen or so different sorts of demonstrations. My first was a visit with Gimbal, a floating robot that hovered in the mid-field between my eyes and a distant wall. I walked up to it, around it, viewed from different angles and it remained silently hovering in my view. The world around it still existed, but I couldn’t see through it. It was as if it had substance, volume, not at all a flat image. I was surprised to find that the closer I got to the robot, to an extent, the more detailed it became. Getting up close to the floating object didn’t expose pixels, it highlighted details I wasn’t able to see from afar. If I got too close, though, it sort of disappeared or I was suddenly inside the thing. Artifacts, I was told, of a demo that hasn’t yet been polished. I also noticed that the sounds of the whirring robot shifted around as I moved around it, always placing the noise where it should be no matter where I stood.

Much like Microsoft’s HoloLens AR headset, Crecente was shown how to launch a number of virtual monitors. To illustrate the spatial awareness and depth-tracking power of the headset, the company also put together a demo featuring a four-sided television which played live TV on each of its faces, where all monitors would continue playing regardless of whether Crecente could physically see them or not.

There, Crecente got a taste of what it might be like to interact with avatars in AR, as the next demo featured a woman walking through a virtual door. Although there wasn’t any interaction to speak of, it showed the potential just the same.

Crecent was allowed to talk about a collaborative AR project with Icelandic band Sigur Rós which was recently revealed. Called Tonandi, the experience let him conjure a ring of ethereal trees, and experience wisps dancing in the air.

As I wave my hands at them, they create a sort of humming music, vanishing or shifting around me. Over time, different sorts of creations appear, and I touch them, wave at them, tap them, waiting to see what sort of music the interaction will add to the growing orchestral choir that surrounds me. Soon pods erupt from the ground on long stalks and grass springs from the carpet and coffee table. The pods open like flowering buds and I notice stingray-like creators made of colorful lights floating around me. My movements, don’t just change this pocket world unfolding around me, it allows me to co-create the music I hear, combining my actions with Sigur Ros’ sounds.

Crecente says his experience with Tonandi was “effortless.”

While there was apparently much more to experience at the headquarters, Rolling Stone was shown the door after that.

Check out Rolling Stone’s full article here, which has more details including interviews with Magic Leap leadership.

 – – — – –

The company doesn’t appear to have a booth at CES this year, so it may be some time before we get our hands on Magic Leap One. We’ll be keeping our eyes out for more news surrounding the headset though, so check back soon for more.

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Magic Leap Finally Reveals Its AR Headset, Magic Leap One

Magic Leap Finally Reveals Its AR Headset, Magic Leap One

After years of mystery and speculation, Magic Leap today finally revealed its first augmented reality product, Magic Leap One Creator Edition.

A new website detailing the device, which projects digital images into the real world, just went live providing our first look at it. Magic Leap One consists of a new AR headset named Lightwear and is accompanied by a tethered companion device named Lightpack that powers AR experiences with performance that the company compares to a laptop computer. It also features a remote-like controller with a trackpad and six degrees of freedom (6DOF) tracking.

Lightwear is fitted with a range of sensors — eight are seen on the front of the device — that gather a 3D reading of your real-world surroundings. With this information, the device uses lightfield photonics to produce virtual objects in the real world that can interact with desks, chairs and other physical objects. The device can also memorize this data so that objects left in one room will remain there when you return.

The kit features what the company calls ‘soundfield audio’, providing positional information from sound sources. Along with the controller, input methods also include eye-tracking, voice recognition, head pose and gesture recognition.

The Creator Edition is shipping next year and you can sign up over on the site to find out more. Pricing for the device, which is essentially a developer kit, hasn’t been announced. Magic Leap will open its Creator Portal in early 2018, introducing its software development kit (SDK) that will help developers get started making their own AR content.

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Magic Leap One enthüllt: So sieht die AR-Brille aus

Magic Leap lüftet das große Geheimnis um das eigene Produkt und stellt seine Augmented-Reality-Brille vor, die zunächst als Creators Edition angeboten wird. Sie trägt wie zuvor schon durchgesickert war den Namen Magic Leap One. Auch der Formfaktor erinnert an den zuvor aufgetauchten Patentantrag.

Magic Leap One mit 6DOF-Controller

Magic Leap One 2

Die Magic-Leap-Brille hat zwar im Vergleich zur Microsoft HoloLens einen deutlich schmaleren Formfaktor, doch dafür ist die Brille nicht völlig autark. Es wird stehts ein Lightpack benötigt, welches ihr an der Hose befestigen sollt. Dieses Pack spendiert der Brille Rechenleistung und Strom.

Lightpack

Zudem wird die Brille nicht ohne einen Controller auskommen. Das aktuelle Produktdesign erinnert an den aktuellen Samsung Gear VR Controller und Magic Leap verspricht sechs Freiheitsgrade.

Magic Leap Controller

Zu den genauen technischen Details gibt es bisher noch keinen weiteren Informationen, doch Magic Leap wird auf Digital Lightfield Technologie setzen, welche für eine natürliche Darstellung von Objekten im Raum sorgen soll. Zudem soll die Brille live ihre Umgebungen erkennen können, damit Gegenstände korrekt in der Welt positioniert werden. Beispielsweise damit eine Spielfigur auf das Sofa springt und nicht in das Sofa hineinrennt.

Der Hersteller wird die Magic Leap One im Jahr 2018 an Entwickler ausliefern. Anfang 2018 will das Unternehmen bereits für Entwickler ein Creator Portal mit SDK, Infos und Dokumentationen zur Verfügung stellen. Aktuell kann man sein Interesse an dem Produkt auf der Webseite des Herstellers bekundigen. Das Produktdesign verspricht zumindest, dass auch eine Version für Konsumenten bald folgen könnte, auch wenn eine unauffällige Brille wohl anders aussieht.

Der Beitrag Magic Leap One enthüllt: So sieht die AR-Brille aus zuerst gesehen auf VR∙Nerds. VR·Nerds am Werk!

Magic Leap Finally Unveils its First AR Product ‘Magic Leap One’, Shipping Starts in 2018

After the long wait, Magic Leap, the secretive augmented reality startup, finally unveiled its first AR headset. Releasing first as a ‘Creator Edition’, the so-called ‘Magic Leap One’ AR headset is said to start shipping in 2018.

While the company has shown its tech to journalists and celebrities alike, all impressions have been held within the strict confines of a non-disclosure agreement (NDA). Starting today, we now have a better picture of the final form-factor and styling of the headset, although hard specs are still under wraps.

Here’s every pertinent image we’ve scrapped from their site so far:

The headset itself is going by the name Lightwear, which features an array of sensors – exactly how many and their individual purpose, we’re not sure yet. Two cables are seen trailing out the back of the Lightwear headset, although Rolling Stone reports these actually unite in a single cable on its way to the computing unit.

The headset, which has a real-time computer vision processor, reportedly contains four built-in microphones, external cameras to track the wearer and the world they’re in, and tiny high-end speakers built into the temples of the device to provide spatial audio.

image courtesy Magic Leap

Rolling Stone reports the headset will come in two sizes, and pieces like the forehead pad, nose pieces, and temple pads can all be customized to insure a good fit. Before the company launches Magic Leap One, they’ll also take user’s glasses prescriptions to build corrective lenses directly into the headset—possibly hinting at a decidedly premium pricetag.

The system comes with a small mobile computer that’s clipped to the user’s waist, which Magic Leap calls the ‘Lightpack’. Tethered by a single cable, the company says it offers “[h]igh-powered processing and graphics, streamlined in a lightweight pack that stays right by your side.” Magic Leap founder and CEO Rony Abovitz told Rolling Stone the company is still working on battery optimization.

A 6DoF motion controller, which is dubbed simply ‘Control’, features a touchpad, “force control and haptic feedback.” Rolling Stone says it also features an “array of buttons.”

There’s no pricing information yet – only a signup form to fill out to register your interest in the Magic Leap One Creator Edition.

The company is also releasing access to the headset’s software development kit (SDK) “along with all of the tools, documentation, learning resources and support you’ll need to begin your journey.” This is said to come in early 2018.

In September 2017, it was rumored the multi-billion dollar Magic Leap could be shipping their first device to “a small group of users within six months,” and that the company would also take on a Series D investment led by Temasek Holdings Pte., a Singaporean venture capital firm. The rumor regarding its Series D  turned out to be true, but we were left waiting on any word of surrounding the headset itself.

Info is still thin on the ground. We’ll be updating this piece as it comes in.

The post Magic Leap Finally Unveils its First AR Product ‘Magic Leap One’, Shipping Starts in 2018 appeared first on Road to VR.

Magic Leap Finally Unveils its First AR Product ‘Magic Leap One’, Shipping Starts in 2018

After the long wait, Magic Leap, the secretive augmented reality startup, finally unveiled its first AR headset. Releasing first as a ‘Creator Edition’, the so-called ‘Magic Leap One’ AR headset is said to start shipping in 2018.

While the company has shown its tech to journalists and celebrities alike, all impressions have been held within the strict confines of a non-disclosure agreement (NDA). Starting today, we now have a better picture of the final form-factor and styling of the headset, although hard specs are still under wraps.

Here’s every pertinent image we’ve scrapped from their site so far:

The headset itself is going by the name Lightwear, which features an array of sensors – exactly how many and their individual purpose, we’re not sure yet. Two cables are seen trailing out the back of the Lightwear headset, although Rolling Stone reports these actually unite in a single cable on its way to the computing unit.

The headset, which has a real-time computer vision processor, reportedly contains four built-in microphones, external cameras to track the wearer and the world they’re in, and tiny high-end speakers built into the temples of the device to provide spatial audio.

image courtesy Magic Leap

Rolling Stone reports the headset will come in two sizes, and pieces like the forehead pad, nose pieces, and temple pads can all be customized to insure a good fit. Before the company launches Magic Leap One, they’ll also take user’s glasses prescriptions to build corrective lenses directly into the headset—possibly hinting at a decidedly premium pricetag.

The system comes with a small mobile computer that’s clipped to the user’s waist, which Magic Leap calls the ‘Lightpack’. Tethered by a single cable, the company says it offers “[h]igh-powered processing and graphics, streamlined in a lightweight pack that stays right by your side.” Magic Leap founder and CEO Rony Abovitz told Rolling Stone the company is still working on battery optimization.

A 6DoF motion controller, which is dubbed simply ‘Control’, features a touchpad, “force control and haptic feedback.” Rolling Stone says it also features an “array of buttons.”

There’s no pricing information yet – only a signup form to fill out to register your interest in the Magic Leap One Creator Edition.

The company is also releasing access to the headset’s software development kit (SDK) “along with all of the tools, documentation, learning resources and support you’ll need to begin your journey.” This is said to come in early 2018.

In September 2017, it was rumored the multi-billion dollar Magic Leap could be shipping their first device to “a small group of users within six months,” and that the company would also take on a Series D investment led by Temasek Holdings Pte., a Singaporean venture capital firm. The rumor regarding its Series D  turned out to be true, but we were left waiting on any word of surrounding the headset itself.

Info is still thin on the ground. We’ll be updating this piece as it comes in.

The post Magic Leap Finally Unveils its First AR Product ‘Magic Leap One’, Shipping Starts in 2018 appeared first on Road to VR.

Magic Leap Could Call its First AR Headset ‘Magic Leap One’

Magic Leap, the secretive augmented reality startup, might be calling its first device ‘Magic Leap One’, as suggested by a recent trademark filing.

The name was filed with the US Patent and Trademark Office on November 6, 2017 alongside something called ‘Magic Leap Monster Battle’. The Monster Battle trademark had been filed and abandoned several times since 2013, and could pertain to a launch title or software integral to the upcoming AR headset.

As reported by Tech Crunch late last year, the ‘One’ name was first hinted at when the company hired National Geographic marketing head Brenda Freeman to take on the role of CMO. A company spokesperson also mentioned that it was “full steam ahead toward the launch of Magic Leap One.”

image courtesy US Patent and Trademark Office

In a Bloomberg report back in September, it was rumored Magic Leap could be shipping their first device to “a small group of users within six months,” and that the company would also take on a Series D investment led by Temasek Holdings Pte., a Singaporean venture capital firm. While the rumor surrounding the Series D funding round turned out to be true, it’s uncertain if the entire report can be trusted—possible Q2 2018 soft launch and all—so we’ll simply have to wait until Magic Leap announces something (anything).

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From what we’ve gathered so far, the Magic Leap headset is said to use a light-field display powered by a novel array of nano-structures, giving the digital imagery true-to-life depth cues which in turn makes the projected image seem more real. While the company has shown its tech to journalists and celebrities alike, all impressions are held within the strict confines of a NDA, so we won’t know much more than what we can tell from public sources such as patents and research papers.


A special thanks goes out to Reddit user AustinM123 for diligently finding the filing.

The post Magic Leap Could Call its First AR Headset ‘Magic Leap One’ appeared first on Road to VR.