While we wait for new virtual reality hardware from Meta – including the Oculus Quest 3 and the mysterious Project Cambria – there's news of some internal shuffling around on the software side that could have an impact on these upcoming devices.
According to a report from The Information (via The Verge), the company formerly known as Facebook is disbanding the team working on an all-encompassing VR and AR operating system with the name XROS.
That team was made up of some 300 people apparently, so this is quite a significant restructuring by Meta. Those team members are reportedly splitting off to other projects inside the company, including work on augmented reality glasses.
In a statement, Meta didn't confirm the disbanding of the XROS team but did say it wanted to «speed up the development of solutions that are hyper-tuned for each product line» – which sounds as though there won't be any unifying OS that covers all of the company's products for the time being.
It's not clear where this leaves the follow-up to the Oculus Quest 2 or the higher-end Project Cambria headset, but it seems a safe bet that these devices won't come with a brand new software platform on board.
The Quest 2 runs an operating system based on Android and it seems as though Meta is going to stick with that software for the time being. One change has already been confirmed though: the Oculus brand name is being dropped from future hardware as everything comes under the Meta umbrella.
With the Oculus Quest 2, virtual reality has finally edged towards the mainstream: it's relatively affordable, it's easy to set up (with no computer connection required), and there are plenty of cool games available for it.
Then there's augmented reality, the overlaying of
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