“Virtuality was the world leader in VR at one point”.
Back in the early 1990s, a technological revolution was taking place in the English Midlands. Located on a rather nondescript industrial estate in a leafy Leicester suburb was a company poised to alter the world of interactive entertainment dramatically; in its future, working relationships with clients as illustrious as Sega, Atari, Ford and IBM were still to come – as was a rather dramatic fall of grace.
Founded by PhD graduate Jonathan D. Waldern, Virtuality was one of the first companies in the world to leverage the rising interest in Virtual Reality. As is so often the case, the technology had been knocking around at organisations like NASA and the US Air Force for some time, but it would soon become a focal point for the entertainment sector, with the 1992 movie The Lawnmower Man being a major catalyst in raising public awareness and interest.
Read the full article on timeextension.com
“Virtuality was the world leader in VR at one point”.
Back in the early 1990s, a technological revolution was taking place in the English Midlands. Located on a rather nondescript industrial estate in a leafy Leicester suburb was a company poised to alter the world of interactive entertainment dramatically; in its future, working relationships with clients as illustrious as Sega, Atari, Ford and IBM were still to come – as was a rather dramatic fall of grace.
Founded by PhD graduate Jonathan D. Waldern, Virtuality was one of the first companies in the world to leverage the rising interest in Virtual Reality. As is so often the case, the technology had been knocking around at organisations like NASA and the US Air Force for some time, but it would soon become a focal point for the entertainment sector, with the 1992 movie The Lawnmower Man being a major catalyst in raising public awareness and interest.
Read the full article on timeextension.com