

The ti-84 plus is based on the zilog z80. From 1976. The calculator is still being made, and still costs $100.
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The ti-84 plus is based on the zilog z80. From 1976. The calculator is still being made, and still costs $100.
Better calculators just use floating point math with a few tricks on top to pretend it isn’t floating point math.
Degrees of freedom
3dof things usually just track rotation, because that’s easier. But for a full VR experience, better depth perception, and more normal interactions, 6dof devices are used which track position as well.
IMO even a normal flatscreen is more immersive on average than a google cardboard, although that’s partially because a flatscreen hides the flaws in the graphics a lot better.
HLA tho needs 6dof controllers for the intended experience. That mod tries to get around it, but that obviously involves some sacrifices.
IIRC no cardboard ‘headset’ ever had 6dof tracking. It’s about as far as you can get from an immersive VR experience. I say this as someone who bought one before learning about VR and getting a real vr headset.
It’s like VR with all of the downsides, even less apps, and the only advantage over a flatscreen being (limited) depth perception.
If you already have a (lower midrange) PC, then yes.
True
it’s doomed now, but I love my Reverb G2, I got it for the same price as a Quest 2 (before the q3 released) and, having used both, its a lot better.
The game starts at 60 USD and goes down to 30 pretty often. If you have VR already, it’s not very expensive.
I think there’s a mod for that iirc
Servo is still making quick progress though.
I think it’s fine to have some less commonly used actions be only accessible through a terminal, even on more user-friendly distros. That is basically what Minecraft does, and yet no one’s scared of that.