Facebook are actively preparing for the next major reconfiguration of the Internet landscape. This shift in the digital layers is expected to be equivalent to a magnitude 9 earthquake. Heightened seismic activity is already being observed.
The company, however, is ready: it registered more than 60% more patents in 2019 than in 2018, and three times more than in 2014.
Virtual reality: will we hear Mark Zuckerberg’s voice in it as our own inner voice, just as those already captivated by the network seem to do?
People are far more troubled when they cannot log into their profile than when the water supply is cut off.
In everyday conversation, whenever the term virtual reality is mentioned, we are often met with expressions of artificial disdain.
Virtuality is an extension. It is a reality that expands when necessary, providing “space” for new objects. Virtualisation is built on a coherent system of relative addresses. The street is “Vasil Levski”, and its identification becomes unambiguous when we specify the town, the country, the continent and, in future, the planet. Virtualisation distributes a single object across different locations while preserving its integrity, and through an algorithm for reassembling those parts, it maintains that integrity. Virtualisation has, of course on a much more limited scale, been carried out for many decades. In that sense, it functions rather like a property register.
Virtual reality, on the other hand, is a parallel reality in which every object has its own digital equivalent. At this point, we would be entering a deep mathematical theory, one that has developed in Bulgaria thanks to the field led by Academician Blagovest Sendov. May he rest in peace (added later)!
The company, however, is ready: it registered more than 60% more patents in 2019 than in 2018, and three times more than in 2014.
Virtual reality: will we hear Mark Zuckerberg’s voice in it as our own inner voice, just as those already captivated by the network seem to do?
People are far more troubled when they cannot log into their profile than when the water supply is cut off.
In everyday conversation, whenever the term virtual reality is mentioned, we are often met with expressions of artificial disdain.
Virtuality is an extension. It is a reality that expands when necessary, providing “space” for new objects. Virtualisation is built on a coherent system of relative addresses. The street is “Vasil Levski”, and its identification becomes unambiguous when we specify the town, the country, the continent and, in future, the planet. Virtualisation distributes a single object across different locations while preserving its integrity, and through an algorithm for reassembling those parts, it maintains that integrity. Virtualisation has, of course on a much more limited scale, been carried out for many decades. In that sense, it functions rather like a property register.
Virtual reality, on the other hand, is a parallel reality in which every object has its own digital equivalent. At this point, we would be entering a deep mathematical theory, one that has developed in Bulgaria thanks to the field led by Academician Blagovest Sendov. May he rest in peace (added later)!
