Home Metaverse Qualcomm Ushers In The Wireless Metaverse With A New AR Smart Viewer

Qualcomm Ushers In The Wireless Metaverse With A New AR Smart Viewer

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I cover break-out tech in mobile, on desktop and in the data center.

If there’s one aspect of technology that breaks the effect of immersion, it’s all the cables and wires that need to be plugged in for our devices to function. Practically speaking, that’s probably one of the reasons our smartphones are so core to our computing experiences these days, and mobile devices now make up well over 60% of web traffic in the US. Further, when it comes to immersive computing-driven experiences, there’s nothing quite as impressive as the burgeoning field of AR (Augmented Reality) or VR (Virtual Reality), though that immersion can be equally disrupted by legacy cabling that keeps humans tethered to devices without complete freedom to move about in their environment. In fact, it could be said that the holy grail of AR and VR experiences begins with high speed, high resolution wireless glasses (AR) or goggles (VR). Until we can get rid of the wires, we’ll never be free in our new digital constructs and will always be a slave to the machine. However, Qualcomm gave me a new perspective on freedom last week at its 5G Summit in San Diego, with its new Wireless AR Smart Viewer reference design. And just like the many vistas in that sunny California town, the view was quite nice. 

Qualcomm Wireless AR Smart Viewer Tech Helps The Glasses Get Out Of The Way Of The Experience

Qualcomm AR Smart Viewer Reference Design Glasses
Qualcomm AR Smart Viewer Reference Design Glasses DAVE ALTAVILLA

It’s one thing to look at a computer or smartphone screen in a traditional use case, but when you start strapping devices onto human heads, you better make things comfortable and heck, eventually even fashionable. While I wouldn’t call Qualcomm’s new Wireless AR Smart Viewer glasses a fashion statement exactly, the Goertek-developed design is 40 percent thinner than Qualcomm’s previous generation wired design, and they sit quite comfortably on your face without feeling awkward or unbalanced. Since they’re AR glasses, they’re designed to overlay a digital experience over the area around you, allowing you to be present in your existing environment, along with co-workers, friends or family. Qualcomm’s partner SeeYa is the manufacturer of the dual micro-OLED binocular displays that deliver a 1920×1080 image resolution per eye at up to 90Hz refresh rate with no-motion-blur technology. These eyeglass-mounted displays and the images rendered in them left me with zero eye fatigue when I personally took them for a test drive recently at an event.

Finally, dual monochrome cameras and one RGB camera on board the glasses deliver 6DoF (six degrees of freedom) head, hand and eye tracking with gesture recognition, which all comes together to complete the experience, along with all the tools you need to interact with your new, now augmented environment. Also on board is a 67 wHr battery that Qualcomm notes currently offers about a 30 minute uptime before needing a charge. Of course, all this sexy external hardware needs powerful, but power-efficient, processing engines on board to handle the rendering, positional and interaction workloads, and that’s where Qualcomm’s silicon technologies come into play.

Qualcomm Snapdragon XR2 And FastConnect 6900 Help Split The Workload And Minimize Latency

Qualcomm AR Smart Viewer Glasses And Snapdragon Powered Smartphone
Qualcomm AR Smart Viewer Glasses And Snapdragon Powered Smartphone DAVE ALTAVILLA

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As you might imagine, what helps drive the experience here is a low latency wireless connection to a Snapdragon-powered Android smartphone. The phone also handles some of the processing workload for the experience, like the XR application (Extended Reality – a term used to describe real and virtual combined environments), encoding and much of the rendering workload. On board the glasses themselves is the very low power Qualcomm Snapdragon XR2 Gen 1platform that handles the video delivery, head, eye and hand tracking and other functions, like decoding the compressed rendered image frames from the phone that does much of heavy lifting for the graphics engine. Qualcomm representatives noted that Snapdragon XR2 Gen 1 is “a purpose-built platform for XR, built on the foundation of Snapdragon 865, featuring XR enablement focused on meeting the needs of a premium XR experience.” In addition, this “split-processing” approach allows the viewer to also utilize the 5G connectivity of the phone, which can be connected to any number of AR applications in the cloud, essentially tapping you into what is currently an emerging metaverse.

Qualcomm FastConnect 6900 XR Application Example And Enabling TechnologiesQualcomm FastConnect 6900 XR Application Example And Enabling Technologies QUALCOMM

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