Leap Motion (not to be confused with Magic Leap) has been working on making virtual reality touchable without special gloves for the last few years and now it’s bringing its high-tech hand-tracking gesture technology to augmented reality.
Unlike Microsoft’s HoloLens ($3,000 for developers) and Magic Leap’s likely expensive Leap One AR headsets, Leap Motion’s “Project North Star” AR headset will only cost under $100 to “produce at scale” meaning it could help pave the way for mainstream AR.
It’s important to understand that Leap Motion doesn’t make or sell headsets. While the under-$100 price is extremely low, it’s only an estimate of how much it would cost for another company to mass produce their own headset based on the Project Star reference design. Read more…
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