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Unlike existing AR headsets such as the MagicLeap 2 or Microsoft HoloLens, the Spectacles feature a discrete, light-weight design more akin to glasses than a headset. Previous creators used the technology to anchor their AR creations to famous structures like the Gateway of India and the Great Sphinx of Giza in Egypt.
Of course it also has telepresence, so you could be virtually present in a place like Egypt – not in real time, but in space and simulation. Alan: So speaking of looking into the future, somebody else who’s kind of looking to the future that you’ve been covering in your Forbes articles is MagicLeap, and their CEO, Rony.
Of course it also has telepresence, so you could be virtually present in a place like Egypt – not in real time, but in space and simulation. Alan: So speaking of looking into the future, somebody else who’s kind of looking to the future that you’ve been covering in your Forbes articles is MagicLeap, and their CEO, Rony.
Alan: The whole idea of being able to take field trips really far -- going to the pyramids in Egypt -- that's not really something that most schools (or any schools), you know, "let's get a flight and fly halfway around the world to go see something." Bill: Yeah, we actually have four MagicLeaps. That was a game-changer.
Alan: The whole idea of being able to take field trips really far — going to the pyramids in Egypt — that’s not really something that most schools (or any schools), you know, “let’s get a flight and fly halfway around the world to go see something.” Bill: Yeah, we actually have four MagicLeaps.
Alan: The whole idea of being able to take field trips really far — going to the pyramids in Egypt — that’s not really something that most schools (or any schools), you know, “let’s get a flight and fly halfway around the world to go see something.” Bill: Yeah, we actually have four MagicLeaps.
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