Magic Leap secures US$793.5m to develop mixed-reality lightfield device
POSTED 03 Feb 2016 . BY Tom Anstey
The Magic Leap device shoots images into the user’s eyes Credit: Magic Leap
Augmented reality (AR) startup Magic Leap has said it’s secured a further US$793.5m (€728m, £549m) in new funding, enough to finance its first product – a digital lightfield device which shoots computer-generated images into the user’s eyes.
Differing from market competitors in AR, such as Microsoft’s Hololens, which uses a stereoscopic technique to create the illusion of a three-dimensional image, Magic Leap’s device uses its alternate mixed-reality lightfield to create a world where digital and physical seamlessly blend together.
Based in Dania Beach, Florida, with offices in the US, UK, New Zealand and Israel, the company first hit the headlines in October 2014 when Google revealed that it had invested US$524m (€479.6m, £361.7m) in Magic Leap, despite no-one at the time knowing what the secretive company did. In March 2015, Magic Leap showed-off its first tech demo when its groundbreaking technology used AR to turn the company’s office into a first-person shooter.
The new funding from the Alibaba Group is the latest in a line of big-name investors including Google, Qualcomm Incorporated, Warner Bros, Fidelity Management, JP Morgan, Morgan Stanley and accounts advised by T.Rowe Price Associates and Wellington Management. Following the latest investment, Magic Leap is now valued at around US$4.5bn (€4.1bn, £3.1bn).
Magic Leap’s next phase of development includes making its device useable for consumers. The company has now entered the pilot production phase and is developing prototypes in Florida which will incorporate its “photonic light chip”. A software development kit for people to create content is also to be released. Magic Leap co-founder and CEO Rony Abovitz has said the technology isn’t “years away”, with the company now entering the production cycle, but that the goal is to enter the market with a fully-formed product rather than a beta version.
Oculus Rift developer, Oculus VR, has said made the consumer version of the virtual reality
technology available to pre-order for a commercial release in March.
View-Master – a popular children's toy since the 1960s – could be the next big step in
affordable, commercial virtual reality following a tie-up between Mattel and Google to
create a new iteration of the device based on VR using smartphones.
Microsoft will be releasing the first developer version of its augmented reality HoloLens
headset “within the next year”, according to the company’s CEO.
Numbers from the Association of Leading Visitor Attractions, (ALVA) show that Royal attractions
saw a huge increase in visitor numbers during 2023 – the coronation year of King Charles III.
Off the back of the success of the first round of Everyday Heritage Grants in 2022, Historic
England is funding 56 creative projects that honour the heritage of working-class England.
Universal has revealed it will be adding new Harry Potter attractions, alongside Super Nintendo
and How to Train Your Dragon worlds to its Florida resort.
Cruise Ship Interiors (CSI) invites cruise lines, shipyards, design studios, outfitters,
and suppliers to take part in CSI Design Expo Americas in Miami, Florida, the region’s only
event dedicated to cruise ship interior design. [more...]
Magic Leap secures US$793.5m to develop mixed-reality lightfield device
POSTED 03 Feb 2016 . BY Tom Anstey
The Magic Leap device shoots images into the user’s eyes Credit: Magic Leap
Augmented reality (AR) startup Magic Leap has said it’s secured a further US$793.5m (€728m, £549m) in new funding, enough to finance its first product – a digital lightfield device which shoots computer-generated images into the user’s eyes.
Differing from market competitors in AR, such as Microsoft’s Hololens, which uses a stereoscopic technique to create the illusion of a three-dimensional image, Magic Leap’s device uses its alternate mixed-reality lightfield to create a world where digital and physical seamlessly blend together.
Based in Dania Beach, Florida, with offices in the US, UK, New Zealand and Israel, the company first hit the headlines in October 2014 when Google revealed that it had invested US$524m (€479.6m, £361.7m) in Magic Leap, despite no-one at the time knowing what the secretive company did. In March 2015, Magic Leap showed-off its first tech demo when its groundbreaking technology used AR to turn the company’s office into a first-person shooter.
The new funding from the Alibaba Group is the latest in a line of big-name investors including Google, Qualcomm Incorporated, Warner Bros, Fidelity Management, JP Morgan, Morgan Stanley and accounts advised by T.Rowe Price Associates and Wellington Management. Following the latest investment, Magic Leap is now valued at around US$4.5bn (€4.1bn, £3.1bn).
Magic Leap’s next phase of development includes making its device useable for consumers. The company has now entered the pilot production phase and is developing prototypes in Florida which will incorporate its “photonic light chip”. A software development kit for people to create content is also to be released. Magic Leap co-founder and CEO Rony Abovitz has said the technology isn’t “years away”, with the company now entering the production cycle, but that the goal is to enter the market with a fully-formed product rather than a beta version.
Oculus Rift developer, Oculus VR, has said made the consumer version of the virtual reality
technology available to pre-order for a commercial release in March.
View-Master – a popular children's toy since the 1960s – could be the next big step in
affordable, commercial virtual reality following a tie-up between Mattel and Google to
create a new iteration of the device based on VR using smartphones.
Microsoft will be releasing the first developer version of its augmented reality HoloLens
headset “within the next year”, according to the company’s CEO.
Numbers from the Association of Leading Visitor Attractions, (ALVA) show that Royal attractions
saw a huge increase in visitor numbers during 2023 – the coronation year of King Charles III.
Off the back of the success of the first round of Everyday Heritage Grants in 2022, Historic
England is funding 56 creative projects that honour the heritage of working-class England.
Universal has revealed it will be adding new Harry Potter attractions, alongside Super Nintendo
and How to Train Your Dragon worlds to its Florida resort.
Cruise Ship Interiors (CSI) invites cruise lines, shipyards, design studios, outfitters,
and suppliers to take part in CSI Design Expo Americas in Miami, Florida, the region’s only
event dedicated to cruise ship interior design. [more...]