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Samsung Galaxy Gear VR: A Portable Oculus Rift for the Galaxy Note 4

This article is over 10 years old and may contain outdated information
Samsung Galaxy Gear VR John Carmack VR 310x

If this doesn’t bring about NetForce in real life, I don’t know what will.

There’s plenty of mobile news coming out of this week’s IFA conference in Berlin, but Samsung just stole the show with its Galaxy Gear VR announcement.

Along with announcing the new Galaxy Note 4 smartphone/phablet, Samsung finally revealed the extent of its partnership with Oculus VR, the Facebook-owned virtual reality company that recently released its second developer kit (DK2). Dubbed Galaxy Gear VR, the new headset was developed by Samsung in tandem with id Software Technical Director-turned-Oculus CTO John Carmack, and the rest of the Oculus mobile team.

The Samsung Gear VR headset is more of an empty harness than a traditional developer kit. But when you add the new Galaxy Note 4 to the equation (literally, you drop the phone into the head harness), the Gear VR becomes an extremely capable virtual reality headset.

The Note 4 has some impressive specs, including a 5.7-inch, 2560 x 1440 Quad HD Super AMOLED display, a 2.7GHz quad-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 805 SoC (with a 600MHz Adreno 420 GPU in tow), and a 3,220mAh battery. The display is a step above what’s available in the Oculus DK2, which is a 1920×1080 AMOLED panel borrowed from the now-obsolete Samsung Galaxy Note 3.

The work done by Carmack and the Oculus mobile group was largely driver- and Android-related, including:

  • Allowing custom calibrated sensors to talk to a dedicated kernel driver
  • Enabling real time scheduled multithreaded application processes at guaranteed clock rates
  • Context prioritized GPU rendering, enabling asynchronous time warp
  • Facilitating completely unbuffered display surfaces for minimal latency
  • Supporting low-persistence display mode for improved comfort, visual stability, and reduced motion blur / judder
  • This collaboration is exclusive to the Galaxy Note 4 (no S5 or Note 3 owners allowed!), but it’s likely telling of what direction Oculus is moving in with its own Rift consumer release. The Note 4’s 1440p display, or some iteration of it, could very well end up in the retail version of the Oculus Rift, as could other Samsung-manufactured hardware. And expect Oculus to integrate any development lessons, or other hardware changes (different optics, etc.) into its own devices.

    The Galaxy Gear VR will be available later this year directly from Samsung, and from select mobile carriers. Pricing is TBA on the Gear VR, while the Note 4 will sell for a standard but unconfirmed contract price (my guess is $250-$300, since it’s a larger device).

    Sources: Oculus, Samsung PR | Oculus Blog

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