Skip to main content

Dying grandmother takes one last walk outside with Oculus Rift

dying grandmother takes one last walk outside oculus rift

Despite attracting a $2 billion buyout by Facebook, the Oculus Rift virtual reality headset remains very much a niche product that’s some way off mass mainstream adoption. We occasionally get glimpses of the device’s huge potential though, such as this one from video game artist Priscilla Firstenberg — she used an Oculus Rift development kit to enable her sick grandmother to take a final tour of the yard outside her home.

Roberta Firstenberg was losing her battle with cancer and lacking the strength to go outdoors when her granddaughter contacted Oculus VR asking for a development kit. Despite a long order backlog, the company provided her with a returned loan unit almost immediately. “I pretty much cried at my desk reading [the email],” Priscilla told The Rift Arcade.

Recommended Videos

Once the Oculus Rift was connected and ready to go, Roberta was able to take a virtual walk around in the outdoors, something she could no longer do physically. Following feedback from YouTube commenters, Priscilla managed to hook up a Google Street View simulator to enable her grandmother to travel even further afield. Four weeks after she first used the Oculus Rift to step outside, Roberta Firstenberg passed away.

“I can’t believe it, I mean you hear about things like that… it’s just like dropping into a mirage, dropping straight down into a bubble of new life. It’s beautiful,” Roberta said after trying out the Oculus Rift for the first time. While the experience wasn’t enough to stop the illness affecting her body, it’s testament to the power of the alternative reality that the Oculus Rift can create that it was able to make some of her final days more enjoyable.

David Nield
Dave is a freelance journalist from Manchester in the north-west of England. He's been writing about technology since the…
The Kat Walk C2 looks to be the ultimate VR treadmill
Kat VR C2 VR treadmill.

As virtual reality becomes more commonplace, we'll need ways of moving in a virtual world without accidentally crashing into our furniture. Kat VR is hoping it's up to the challenge via the second-generation of its Kat Walk C VR treadmill.

Originally reported by Road to VR, the Kat Walk C2 is basically an omnidirectional treadmill that allows the user to "freely" move about a virtual environment as naturally as real life. This includes walking, jogging, sprinting, dodging, jumping, kneeling, and other actions you may perform in a game.

Read more
Meta wants its next VR headset to replace your laptop
Oculus Quest VR Headset

Mark Zuckerberg wants the announcement of his company's next premium VR headset to be an "iPhone moment" -- a defining shift for virtual reality with mass consumer adoption of the technology. To achieve that vision, Meta, the company that Zuckerberg helms, will first start by replacing your trusty laptop with goggles.

Meta, which owns Facebook and the company and technology behind Oculus, is working on an unannounced premium virtual reality headset called Project Cambria, which the company briefly teased at its Connect conference. Project Cambria comes with new technology that isn’t yet available on current VR headsets, like eye-tracking and facial recognition monitoring to record your facial expressions -- as well as new optics.

Read more
You can now high-five in VR
oculus quest finger tracking coming in 2020

An update to the Meta Quest VR headset is allowing improved hand gestures, which includes both clapping and high-fiving in VR.

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerburg has often painted a vision of an immersive metaverse, where people could interact almost as if they would in real life. Meta's ambitions are one step closer, as the company showed off enhanced hand tracking support for its Quest VR headset. They attempt to provide much more natural motions to make virtual interactions less awkward.

Read more