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This new feature will appear in the first launch of
This new feature will appear in the first launch of the Rift and HTC Vive, which has been in the works for quite some time now. It's been rumored that the device will be launched in March and launch with a new version of SteamVR.
The new version of SteamVR is available by default to developers and publishers, but is expected to ship with new features in the first week of March. HTC also announced that it is building an "exclusive" version of Steam for the Rift that will provide users with an enhanced experience. HTC is also working on SteamVR at a later date, and while the Rift will be available for PC and HTC Vive users, it's also possible that SteamVR will be a more limited version of Windows than what's available for the Vive Pro Eye.
The Vive Pro Eye was designed by Michael Breslow, who left the company in February 2010 and is still working on the headset with a new team led by the former senior Vice President of Design at Intel . With the Rift now in more than two years, it's expected that this new version of SteamVR will get a full-fledged Windows version by late February.
HTC said that it is "pushing forward the Oculus Touch and Oculus Touch 2 technologies to enable a more user-friendly experience on the Vive Pro Eye and Vive Pro, as well as bring VR into the mainstream for the first time."
A separate report earlier today confirmed that Vive Pro Eye will ship with a built-in 360-degree camera, which is "likely to be used for gaming and other special effects applications." In the Oculus press conference, the company also added that it is working to build a "multi-screen headset to allow gamers to do the same thing with VR" with the Rift.
The Rift and Vive Eye will be built on the same platform as the original Vive that was released back in 2010, and the company said that it will be able to work with "the most powerful Oculus Rift hardware (the Rift DK1, the Rift DK2, the Rift DK3, and all the rest)," allowing the user to experience a variety of different perspectives, without having to go through a full VR experience.
According to the press release , HTC will support full 360-degree VR in Windows 10 by implementing the "Directional Stereo" feature, a feature that allows the user to "see 360 degree images from up to 180 degrees" for more than just 360 degrees, and allows for a "hand-held display that is not available in any
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