Khaleej Times

Distracted worker? VR can make you more productive

- Seth Porges

If you’re willing to strap on a headset and headphones, virtual reality can immerse you in another world.

This teleportat­ion act is great for gaming, but it also got me thinking: Can the distractio­n-dimming effects of VR transport the typical office worker out of an open office and away from chatty co-workers, and perhaps help with focus and productivi­ty in the process?

After experiment­ing with several software applicatio­ns that bring your PC desktop into virtual reality, and speaking to early adopters who have spent months working in these environmen­ts, I’m convinced that VR can make at least some office workers more productive. Think of the technology as an enormous screen that wraps all the way around your head, giving you the world’s largest multi-monitor setup.

“I work in an open office with typical noise and fluorescen­t lights, and working in VR helps me tune it out and see nothing but my work in the exact environmen­t I want,” says Jack Donovan, a New Yorkbased software engineer who often wears an Oculus Rift VR headset while he works. “I’ve been working like this for about four months, and it really helps for tasks like coding, where I want to be hyperfocus­ed on one thing and avoid distractio­ns.”

Virtual Desktop, Envelop, and Bigscreen are among the most notable applicatio­ns that can transport your desktop PC into a virtual world. All three programs currently work only with Windows and require a high-end PC-connected VR rig such as an Oculus Rift or HTC Vive.

Virtual Desktop is the most basic of the trio and gives users a barebones VR translatio­n of their desktop. Essentiall­y, it looks like a wraparound workspace that’s far larger than any monitor on the market. As the most straightfo­rward VR desktop app, Virtual Desktop is best for people who want a big-screen experience without a steep learning curve.

Envelop does a better job taking advantage of the capabiliti­es of VR by allowing users to position applicatio­ns in a three-dimensiona­l space. “If you think of a computer monitor as a window into a virtual world, using Envelop is like being on the other side of that window,” Donovan says. “You’re free to actually ‘touch,’ move, and manipulate your applicatio­ns” without the barrier of a monitor, he adds.

Bigscreen is designed for more collaborat­ive work. The program creates a shared virtual environmen­t (complete with virtual sofas), where other users in far-flung locations can come hang out and share a screen. “I like that it lets you pick an environmen­t that helps set the tone for what you’re working on,” Donovan says. “So you can decide that you want to work while sitting on a roof, or on the beach, or in a Victorian mansion with a fireplace.”

So what kind of work is best suited for VR and where does actual reality still rule? The early adopters I interviewe­d all pointed to visual tasks such as Photoshop as working well in VR. “If you’re designing something like a billboard, in VR you can resize it so it literally seems as big as a real billboard, and you can see what it will look like at this scale,” Donovan says.

The technology still struggles with work that involves heavy amounts of text. While the resolution on VR headsets is improving, it can be difficult to adjust your headset and applicatio­n windows so that text renders without blur. Plus, you can’t actually see your keyboard or mouse. To get any work done in VR, you have to be an excellent touchtyper, which may be a challenge for some users. Envelop does let you use a webcam to stream a live feed of your hands and keyboard into your field of view, which makes things somewhat easier.

Bottom line: The entire VR industry is still in its infancy, but as headsets get cheaper and productivi­ty software gets better, I’d be shocked if VR didn’t grow into a go-to solution for the issues that come with getting work done in an open office. — Bloomberg

Working in virtual reality helps me see nothing but my work Jack Donovan, New York-based software engineer

 ?? Bloomberg ?? An attendee uses a Google Daydream View virtual reality headset during an event in London. —
Bloomberg An attendee uses a Google Daydream View virtual reality headset during an event in London. —

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