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2 wk. ago

  • I don't see it in the hardware design, but from a software perspective the groundwork is there for modularity. Offloading the core compute to the PC frees up onboard processing to run peripherals like full color front cameras (onboard are black and white / IR) and more advance proximity detection, hell hook up lidar and go nuts with full body tracking.

    That said, all of that would depend on decent I/O. 2x USB4 ports would go a long way.

  • It days right in the marketing text that the headset is "a PC" which to me implies full SteamOS distro with no limitations on installing a different OS, if you can get the many hardware drivers to work.

  • They are working on it, the leas dev is working with the lead Dev of slidge to propose a new Spaces protocol to enable "sub-channel" type functionality.

  • I remain convinced they have held back budget on AI because they are waiting for the bubble to burst so they can buy one of the bigger developers like Anthropic. Why burn a bunch of cash now just to loose the race when at the end of the day Open Source options might come out competitive or one of the leaders in the space can be bought out once valuations hit a reality check?

  • It's too bad it leaves the door open for age verification requirements, but the language is overall pretty decent.

  • Its a commercial product fundamentally. Looking at the company's site its clear this is an attempt to sell their commercial/enterprise "private cloud" node hardware to the general public but they've botched the marketing.

    Medical and Transport are their core business, and they are a software-first company that has built a hardware solution for ready drop-in of their secure private cloud server software stack. https://www.nexalta.net/blog-news/11

    Looking at NAS options is how I found this, I got suggested a few NAS kickstarters, but the hardware on this one seems to be superior over all. Too bad the documentation sucks.

  • Well there are 15 days left on the kickstarter but it has been up for a while. I didn't catch the medical office thing before, but makes perfect sense, they are clearly a commercial/enterprise targetted business and this is their first kickstarter. They just don't know how to market to the masses.

    I agree the software documentation is lacking, they claim it is easy to setup but they don't show what it is actually like.

    I get a sense that this could be a diamond in the rough but to your point about drivers I agree support is going to make or break this device. I think there are some indications that could be decent, the company itself appears to be software-first and targeting highly regulated industries (medical and transport) that require zero downtime. So long as the company itself survives I would guess drivers will likely stay updated. As long as the company survives.

    To that point, it seems like this kickstarter is a line in the water for rebranding their enterprise "private cloud" hardware for general use, but they half baked the launch.

    IDK, I'm tempted, but without better documentation it's hard to spend that cash.

  • I love this idea, but I agree lack of docker is going to make it harder to convince folks to use.

  • OK, you might be on to something there.