Got my OSVR Dev Kit in the mail. Set the VR Headset up, was really excited to mess with it, etc.
Unfortunately, it makes me pretty nauseous, doesn't fit my big head, the adjustable diopter doesn't cover my prescription, the only lense position that fits my glasses is also the strongest vision correction setting (it and my glasses have a combined total vision correction of +9 which is
really bad for my eyes) and by and large I can't use it.
Thinking about returning it, and just saving up for the HTC Vive. Worst comes to worst, I can just use OSVR software for developing. I just really wanted to support the project; I love what Sensics are doing creating a common standard for VR Hardware and Software, before everyone makes a bunch of proprietary connectors and software markets and crap.
Ah, well.
I hate the stupid arbitrary restrictions that professors place on what counts as "research". Statements by Brian Kernigan, author of The C Programming Language and creator of two other languages? Nope, it doesn't count as research, because it was on YouTube and not on a stupid archaic paper medium, or even better, behind a paywall on a university database.
Yeah. It's a kind of irony that Universities are still stuck in the past in so many ways. Gender and racial disparity in instructors, and outright departmental misogyny are still huge in technical fields, depending on where you go. There's the archaic methodology for assessing which data can be accepted as fact, and which data aren't trusted. The cutthroat way researchers fight to publish first on a new body of research, causing whoever is slower to waste years of work and funding on redundant research. Even the bullying of the peer-review processes that gets would-be Doctors admitted into a the Inner Circle of Academics. Sometimes, the whole Academia thing reminds me of a historic secret society or cult; they've certainly got rituals and ceremonial garbs and oaths enough. I could go on about the absurd spending on College Sports, the unsustainable rising costs despite the modern habit of replacing all the well-paid and knowledgeable tenured professors with poorly-paid adjuncts, and all sorts of other things that just kill me... but this isn't the angry thread, and I need to calm down.
Yeah, I love the science that comes out of it, but I can't help but think some time spent in institutional reforms would help speed things along. And make the bad bits a
bit less awful.
Or, you know, we could just put more guns in schools I guess? 9_9