I think people would learn to move out of the way at that point or just use Siri to respond. That felt very much like a “first-time” faux pas when he stops on the stairs.
I wonder how it compares to staring down at one’s phone though. At least in an AR scenario, you’re looking straight ahead right? I can both see how that could improve your spatial and social awareness, but I can also see how you could tunnel vision on your content just as easily.
When you look at your phone, I can tell you’re looking at your phone. If you’re wearing a headset I have no idea where you’re actually looking. And you could be pointing your face straight at me but completely gone watching a video or something.
Eyes are such a fundamental part of human body language. We need to be able to see each others to have effective communication.
Going forward I’m just going to refuse to talk to anyone wearing headsets. You can stand there and say all you want, if you’d like to talk to me then take the headset off. I sound like a boomer that doesn’t understand wireless earbuds that pause and pass through outside audio automatically. I still take them out out of respect, though, if it’s anything more than a sentence.
Saw that review.
Social politeness is already an issue. Imagine the chaos of lots of people using those and answering texts in places like doorways and stairs.
Just stopping wherever they are and chicken pecking at an imaginary keyboard(exactly as he does in the review)
I think people would learn to move out of the way at that point or just use Siri to respond. That felt very much like a “first-time” faux pas when he stops on the stairs.
The weird thing is that there are already efficient gesture keyboards. It’s a weird choice by Apple to not use one.
I don’t think I’ve ever seen a gesture-based keyboard that worked well. Got any examples?
I wonder how it compares to staring down at one’s phone though. At least in an AR scenario, you’re looking straight ahead right? I can both see how that could improve your spatial and social awareness, but I can also see how you could tunnel vision on your content just as easily.
When you look at your phone, I can tell you’re looking at your phone. If you’re wearing a headset I have no idea where you’re actually looking. And you could be pointing your face straight at me but completely gone watching a video or something.
Eyes are such a fundamental part of human body language. We need to be able to see each others to have effective communication.
Going forward I’m just going to refuse to talk to anyone wearing headsets. You can stand there and say all you want, if you’d like to talk to me then take the headset off. I sound like a boomer that doesn’t understand wireless earbuds that pause and pass through outside audio automatically. I still take them out out of respect, though, if it’s anything more than a sentence.
Is that hard to imagine? I see people nearly colliding into each other in the hallway on a daily basis looking at their phones.
I wouldn’t worry, most of em won’t survive the traffic of cars and people.