By Cameron Camp
Last year, CES 2017 heralded the age of ubiquitous
Virtual Reality or VR as the cool kids call it, but now CES 2018 has come and
gone and you probably still don’t own or use a VR system. So why not?
VR has been a slow burn. The problem has been to
create realism to the extent that the brain can stop nagging you that you’re
not in a real environment and just adapt, and learn whatever’s being presented.
This year there are even more VR offerings than at
last year’s event, with better resolution, lower latency, better and more
intuitive sensors – the kind that might be useful for visualizing large sets of
security threat data and discerning significant trends – so the
slower-than-expected adoption of VR might be about to speed up.
Bolstering this potential is the deluge of Artificial
Intelligence (AI) offerings this year, along with augmented reality
implementations. So maybe we’re finally getting ready to see the promise of “VR
everywhere”, helping us to do everything from training to security to the next
killer app we haven’t even imagined yet.
Case in point: When sensors were just starting to
come out, the headset would paint an environment to the eyes that suggested you
were immersed in a virtual environment, but the next human instinct was to
raise your hands to see how they reacted. Since there were no hand sensors,
they wouldn’t be displayed in the environment, and the brain sort of checked
back out of virtual reality.
” This is another hint to
your brain that what you are experiencing in VR is not the the real world”
Also, there’s the display issue. Even if you have
high-definition displays, they don’t emulate moving through a real environment.
This is because you overlay a flat image onto a surface, but when you “pass by”
that object, your peripheral vision doesn’t detect the other side of the image
being displayed on the other side of the object. This is another hint to your
brain that what you are experiencing in VR is not the the real world. Therefore
the credibility of the synthesized reality is in doubt. To address this,
some initiatives are underway that use special cameras to recreate scenes by
capturing these missing visual elements and then make them available in the VR
gear.
Then there’s latency. If you progress rapidly
through an environment, the rendering process has to have very low latency to
appear real. The good news is the devices this year at CES have far more
computing power, faster access speed, and lower latency throughout, so even
lower-priced pieces of the puzzle are available, driving the total cost of a
more believable environment down to a price that makes it accessible to a wider
audience.
One side effect of slower than expected uptake of
VR is that virtual reality application developers have been slow to invest in
creating content. In this sort of chicken-and-egg cycle, growth tends to be
slow, not explosive.
“The credibility of the
synthesized reality is disbelieving”
However, due to the strong strides this past year
in AI cores that “know” or can infer more about your changing environment, the
overall experience can seem far more real, and commoditization of that
technology makes such improved VR experience increasingly affordable. AI
has come a long way in recent years, especially around integrating it into
other environments through hooking APIs and such.
Speaking of APIs, much of the modular technology
involved in VR is getting far better at supplying more robust (and hopefully
documented) APIs that are far easier to use for developing VR. Whether you’re
integrating LiDAR
into your project, or servos, or any of a host of other sensors, it’s very
helpful to have great APIs to tie them all together, or at least get them all
to speak the same language.
On the LiDAR front alone, we saw some impressive
sensors developed that have dropped precipitously in cost over the past few
years, putting them in reach of various builders seeking to emulate
environments in new ways.
We hope VR continues to make strides, and not just
because it’s fun to enter a “realistic” virtual environment — the entire
security industry, and lots of others, could benefit immensely. Consider this:
every day in the world of cybersecurity we process stunning amounts of threat
data and we are working on better ways to visualize threats and infer trends in
that data. It is hoped that better VR could prove to be a big help to the world
of cybersecurity.