Mark Pesce is a VR pioneer who has been thinking about networked virtual and augmented reality for over 20 years now. He developed the Ono-Sendai Sega VR helmet prototype, co-created VRML, and presented his Cyberspace Protocol spec at the first Web conference in 1994. This CP spec evolved into the Mixed Reality Services spec, which aims to be a distributed system that would grant geospatial permissions for mixed reality applications.
This system would be an open way of preventing AR games from being played at culturally sensitive locations, but also provide Universal Resource Identifiers to bring the open web to the real world. It could provide permissions for airspace & drones, surveillance permissions, AR game permissions, hazmat warnings, electrical and plumbing layouts, and hours of operations for buildings.
I had a chance to catch up with Pesce where he gave me a history of his work on the canceled SEGA VR helmet, VRML, and the evolution of the Mixed Reality Service. We also talk about his first ritual in VR and Technopagan explorations, as well as his thoughts on ethics in overall tech industry.
LISTEN TO THE VOICES OF VR PODCAST
Show Notes
- Pesce on The Mixed Reality Service
- Pesce on The Web-Wide World
- Pesce on POST NO BILLS
- Pesce on Why I quit Facebook
- Spirits of Place
- Technopagans and the CyberSamhain Ritual
- Binge Breaker: Tristan Harris on Unplug SF
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Music: Fatality & Summer Trip