Waterloo Region Record

Facebook unveils Quest, virtual-reality headset

Device won’t require a phone or computer

- MICHAEL LIEDTKE

SAN FRANCISCO — Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg is off to a slow start in his mission to bring virtual reality to the masses, so perhaps it’s appropriat­e his company’s next VR headset will be called Quest.

The headset from Facebook’s Oculus division will be a standalone device that won’t require a smartphone or a connection to a personal computer to create artificial worlds.

The Quest won’t be available until next spring, although Zuckerberg unveiled the new headset at an Oculus conference held Wednesday in San Jose, California.

Priced at $399, the Quest will cost twice as much as the less powerful, standalone Oculus Go released earlier this year. But it’s the same price as the Oculus Rift that tethers users to a PC.

Zuckerberg eventually hopes to have 1 billion people using virtually reality, but he acknowledg­ed Wednesday that Facebook may not have even reached 1 per cent of that goal more than four years after paying $2 billion to buy Oculus.

That implies fewer than 10 million people are using Oculus products, and recent data from the research firm Internatio­nal Data Corp. shows the still-nascent VR market has been losing momentum.

Shipments of VR headsets dropped 34 per cent from last year during the April-June period, according to IDC. But the Oculus Go and a copycat, budgetpric­ed headset from China’s Xiaomi fared reasonably well, IDC said, with 212,000 devices shipped. That was even though they weren’t available for the entire second quarter.

For all of 2018, IDC predicts shipments of VR headsets and devices built for a similar technology known as augmented reality will increase 31 per cent from last year to 4.2 million.

That’s still a relatively small number for a form of technology that has been drawing major investment­s from Facebook and other industry heavyweigh­ts such as Google, Microsoft, Sony, Samsung and Apple.

As he was last year when he announced the Oculus Go, Zuckerberg is counting on the Quest to widen VR’s appeal. VR so far has attracted people interested in playing video games on them, but Zuckerberg believes it’s only a matter of time before outside developers introduce other applicatio­ns that will help lure people into buying one of Oculus’ three different headsets.

“This is the basic road map,” Zuckerberg said after showing off the Quest. “This is what we need to do for VR to succeed and get to the future we want.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Quest headset will be a stand-alone device that won't require a smartphone or a connection to a computer to create artificial worlds.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Quest headset will be a stand-alone device that won't require a smartphone or a connection to a computer to create artificial worlds.

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