If you're still on the fence whether AR/VR will ever take off, and haven't tried it in a while (or ever), take some time this year to try the Quest 3 ($499). Latency is great, the headset is comfortable enough (with a halo strap), and the apps are getting there.
Content is really what is going to make or break these platforms, and I don't fully understand why Apple and Meta aren't pouring money into a new title release every month or two.
I think we will have chips wired directly to our brain before that kind of thing really takes off. Better remove the need of a screen in front of our eyes than invent goofy/fragile/heavy contraptions.
For those curious, you can also do some pretty fast prototyping (including deploy) with https://bolt.new and https://v0.dev (vercel). Sometimes even a single prompt.
> Switzerland is one of the first countries to possess a detailed 3D buildings model covering the whole country. This digital model of Switzerland consists of approx. 70 million 3D objects. Besides every single building in Switzerland and the Principality of Liechtenstein, bridges, cable cars, forests, individual trees and geographical names are also represented in 3D. Two movement modes enable interactive navigation through space. Discover digital Switzerland from the air in flight mode or take a virtual stroll around a 3D model of your own village or neighbourhood.
I wonder if this dataset has been added to OpenStreetMap (or what the legal restrictions could be). If I look at Zurich on https://osmbuildings.org/ it seems like it has all the buildings in 3d.
This might be a stupid question, but isn't Switzerland known for its countless hidden bunkers and defense positions? Doesn't mapping and publicly exposing basically the whole country only bring negatives and nothing positive?
I though Switzerland's defense was more based around being mountainous and having explosives planted in critical tunnels/bridges and having a large percentage of the population armed and trained for national self defense. Basically in a ground invasion would be deadly and slow with no mobility and resistance everywhere.
Besides that it's hard to imagine which foreign power would have incentive and power projection to even try it.
The way I've understood it is that none of their defense is hidden, it uses the natural and societal benefits. Most of that could be gleaned by anyone with access to satellite images and wikipedia.
That might all be outdated info though, it'd be interesting to see where I'm wrong though!
Historically that has been the case for for Sweden as well I think. Every older apartment building I've lived in (built before 1990-ish) has had bunkers in the basement, and usually it seems to be sized for more than just the buildings residents (although it is repurposed for storage these days). Thick steel doors and all the other tell-tales of old civilian bunkers.
I'm guessing other European countries did this too.
I've definitely seen clips of heavy artillery tucked away into friendly barns and garden sheds. Maybe there's just wealthy people who like to collect large guns and there's some pride in turning away a Nazi invasion with their defenses.
Here's a cute video I found discussing the line of 12 fortresses protecting a little bottleneck of a river valley - he explains that the two camouflaged as villas are done so as not to be eyesores for the tourists.
A former infantry bunker is camouflaged as a medieval house in the town of Duggingen. Notice the half-circle windows, which appear to have been painted on
Nearby mountains have been made so porous that whole divisions can fit inside them. There are weapons and soldiers under barns. There are cannons inside pretty houses.
If you look closely, you can see a massive door in the hillside that would swing open - A Swiss Air Force Mirage III RS outside its mountain hanger.
I have one of such fortifications, called Toblerone line, running around our place in canton Vaud. The whole line is maybe 15km long from Geneva lake up the Jura mountains, made up from concrete spikes (even raisable in the middle of roads), blowable bridges and around 15 tiny concrete fortresses (fortinettes), all in plain sight, mostly visible on google maps/street view.
All built around 1930s. There is popular hiking trail along all this, since nature and forests around it are pretty and well maintained. No secret really. Same for many other old stuff. New stuff should be hidden on bases/remote places.
Btw checked our building and surrounding ones and its pretty precise but not up to date with 2024 finished construction.
Could you detect when on mobile and link to the mobile wiki page?
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