I fail to see what the issue is. He got some experience while working for somebody, and he applied that experience for his own business venture. Are we really punishing people for learning and growing? If you want to say that he stole proprietary and patented technology and used it for his own business, that's different.
Total
Recall Technologies has a patent for a method that takes video of a
real-world scene and projects it into the head-mounted display (how
freaking sad is it that there's a patent for something basic like
that). They hired Palmer to build a headmount prototype for them.
What's weird is I've never heard anything they're doing with the Rift
regarding anything in the real-world. Everything I've heard about the
Rift is about gaming, which is not a real-world scene... it's a
computer-rendered scene. This can't be about the patent then... in
which case I don't understand what they're suing for, because they hired
the guy to build them a headmount prototype. He already knew how to do
that.
What they were doing sounds like little more than sticking
a couple of webcams on the front of the headmount and they're connected
to a tiny monitor within. That's not even close to what the Rift is
doing, which is actual head-tracking and converting that into viewpoint changes in a virtual world.
Smells
fishy. Smells like a company that wants some free money by grasping at
straws. Hey TRT, stop wasting the legal system's time.相关的主题文章:
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