Kickstarter campaign for 3D AR and VR headset reaches funding goal in two days

Kickstarter campaign for 3D AR and VR headset reaches funding goal in two days

Shunal Doke October 17, 2013, 11:20:43 IST

The Kickstarter campaign started by ex-Valve employee Jeri Ellsworth for castAR…

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Kickstarter campaign for 3D AR and VR headset reaches funding goal in two days

The Kickstarter campaign started by ex-Valve employee Jeri Ellsworth for castAR —a 3D augmented and virtual reality headset—has been quite a success. In just two days since the campaign started, it has reached its funding goal of $400,000. At the time of writing, the campaign still has 28 days to go and is sitting on $444,941 with 1,836 backers. The campaign will go on till November 14. The company will undoubtedly announce some stretch goals for the project soon.

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In its entirety, castAR consists of glasses, the Magic Wand and an RFID Tracking Grid. The Magic Wand is a controller that lets you position things in space and control them with a joystick, and the tracking grid allows you to uniquely identify, track and augment physical objects on the surface. The tracking grid has a bunch of application some of which include tabletop games such as Dungeons & Dragons or Magic: The Gathering, which either require cards or miniatures at defined places in the game’s space.

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This has the makings of being one of the most lucrative Kickstarter campaigns ever

The frames of the castAR glasses contain two micro-projectors—one for each eye. Each projector casts a perspective view of a stereoscopic 3D image onto a surface. A camera between the projectors scans for infrared identification markers placed on the surface, which can be used by the camera to precisely track your head’s position and orientation. This lets the in-built software adjust the holographic scene accordingly. The glasses get their video signal through an HDMI connection. The camera is connected via a USB port on the PC.

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The surface, referred to earlier as the RFID Tracking Grid, is made of retro-reflective sheeting material, which means that it can bounce the majority of light from the projectors directly back towards the glasses with little scattering. This allows the simultaneous use of a single surface by multiple users, while at the same time keeping each viewer’s view private from the others.

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Written by Shunal Doke

Ever heard of one of those people who just never seem to shut up about something? Shunal is like the nerd equivalent of that guy. Believe us when we say that he can go on talking about games and smartphones for hours on end. We do manage to find some insight in his insane ramblings though, and through his moronic facade, he does seem to know more than he lets on. Sadly enough, it always ends up being about gaming with him. Or stupid, stupid puns. see more

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