Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

Compute from the beach (or Mars) with Space, a VR office environment

Add as a preferred source on Google

Virtual reality gaming is great fun – we’ve talked about it a lot in recent months. But VR has the potential to be much more practical than just letting us swing swords and shoot guns at digital enemies. It could help improve our productivity too. That’s what Pygmal’s Space is looking to do, by expanding your desktop to potentially infinite displays, in any location you choose, all through the power of virtual reality.

Space works in a similar manner to Virtual Desktop and Big Screen, but unlike those platforms which look to emulate the real-world monitor you have, Space wants to create a bunch of new ones for you to use. Six in fact, with the beta version, but when the final version launches before the end of this year, we’re told it will support as many as you like.

Recommended Videos

When it does debut, the final version of Space will probably be free

“This could be the future of work,” Pygmal’s founder and CEO, Xiao Jia told us. “You can do whatever you want with it.”

This works because Space does away with the concept of displays altogether. As explained to us by Jia, Space works natively with Windows applications and browsers, letting them essentially “draw,” content into the virtual space. That means you could have a browser open on one panel, a music app in another, a couple of Youtube videos either side and the work you’re supposed to be doing in another.

When viewed through a VR headset, these panels can be moved, changed in size, shape and distance from your face, and they don’t use up any more resources than they would if they were displayed on standard monitors, we’re told.

The backdrop is entirely customizable too. If you don’t like the default environment, change it up with one of the many included backdrops. There’s a beach, or the middle of space – whatever takes your fancy. However if none of that does it for you, you can even load iyour own 360 degree images and use them instead.

SPACE--6_3d_model
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Pygmal is also hoping that 3D modellers pick up on Space’s potential, as it can load in three dimensional images, which you can continue to customize in a 3D space – something that’s just not possible on traditional 2D monitors.

Space is mostly a tool designed to aid the office workers of the world, but it is looking to offer entertainment options too. Instead of taking off the headset or loading up another piece of software to watch a film, you can do that right inside Space’s virtual environment. In-fact if you maximize videos, it automatically switches over to the VR theater mode, which gives you the best seat in the house.

Right out of the gate Space has full support for the Oculus Rift and HTC Vive headsets. The beta doesn’t come with support for either platform’s motion controls, though we’re told that Pygmal is currently playing around with a prototype of Oculus’ Touch controllers and the release version of the Vive’s wand controllers, so we can expect support for those to arrive along with the final version.

This all seems like quite a lot for Pygmal, a relatively new start-up, to take on. However earlier this year it secured funding to the tune of $300,000, so should have enough backing for now to keep it going right through to Space’s commercial release.

Other features set to arrive when that day comes include; support for an infinite number of windows; drawing 3D content with motion controls and even your hands using Leap Motion; better support for more native Windows applications (including games); and support for the HTC Vive’s front-facing camera, to provide a real world view of the user’s mouse and keyboard for easier interaction.

Better yet, when it does debut, the final version of Space will probably be free. Although Jia wasn’t certain on that point, he said the plan was to keep it as such, much like the beta, with only business and commercial users charged for its use.

You can download the Beta 1.0 of Space direct from the Pygmal site, or if you’d rather wait for it to be supported on other platforms, consider giving it a vote on Steam Greenlight.

Jon Martindale
Jon Martindale covers how to guides, best-of lists, and explainers to help everyone understand the hottest new hardware and…
ChatGPT is recommending scam websites that will steal your credit card info
The chatbot is surfacing fraudulent clones of defunct retail brands, and scammers are deliberately engineering sites to game its recommendations.
ChatGPT running on a laptop.

Scammers have found a new way to reach shoppers: getting ChatGPT to do their marketing for them. According to The Guardian, scam-checking service Ask Silver found that OpenAI's chatbot is recommending fraudulent retail websites built to harvest payment details from unsuspecting buyers. The sites mimic real storefronts and use official-looking URLs, making them difficult to spot without scrutiny.

Defunct brands are a prime target

Read more
McDonald’s new AI drive-thru has to prove it can handle hungry people
After its earlier ordering bot became a punchline, McDonald’s is testing a new system that promises fewer human handoffs.
Architecture, Building, Hotel

McDonald’s is bringing AI back to the drive-thru with a new Google-backed system called ArchIQ, also known as Archy. It’s starting in five locations under the company’s broader “> NEXT” technology push, with a franchisee claiming the system has already handled more than 1 million orders.

The bigger number is the one McDonald’s needs people to trust. About 90% of those orders reportedly needed no human intervention. That sounds promising, but this is not a clean reset. Its earlier IBM-backed AI drive-thru experiment ended after viral mistakes turned automated ordering into a public punchline.

Read more
Logitech’s Mobi Fold is a pocketable folding mouse for folks who despise trackpads
Logitech’s Mobi Fold looks like a tiny productivity taco
Logitech Mobi Fold

Laptop trackpads are fine until you get really busy. Editing a spreadsheet in an airport lounge, juggling tabs in a café, or trying to do proper work on a tiny hotel desk can make you miss the convenience of a mouse. Logitech has the answer to this with the new Mobi Fold, its first ultra-portable foldable mouse.

While a small portable mouse is something people carry, many choose to skip the added bulk, simply choosing to bite the bullet with the trackpad. But the Logitech Mobi Fold can simply fold flat, and can later be unfolded when you need to work. This makes it pretty convenient to carry. Logitech even made the mouse to automatically power on when opened and turn off when folded.

Read more