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Replying to @CuriosityonX
Oculus planet
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Replying to @CuriosityonX
Oculus One
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Rikuo retweeted
13 May 2025
40代(今)は日本にVRを普及させるとか突然言い出してバチクソ働いた。 →Oculus Japanを立ち上げた →Oculus VR契約社員 →Facebookとかいう外資に正社員入社 →DMM VRエロ動画アプリの審査を無理やり通した →VTuber関連ビジネス立ち上げ →ハードウェアスタートアップで執行役員CTO 50代は無職予定
13 May 2025
30代はサラリーマンに向いてないことに気づいて、仲間と会社立ち上げたりしてバチクソ働いたwww。あと自分の会社登記した時期だなあ
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And the oculus catches them running for the exits. The way the Yankees fans did after game 5 in 2024
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Replying to @CuriosityonX
Oculus Prime
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MonikaHeiniger retweeted
Guten Morgen vom Oculus in New York 😴
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I NEED A DOWNLOADABLE FILE OF THE VR CONCERT SO I CAN REWATCH IT ON MY OCULUS
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マザボとCPU変えてから ・bluetooth接続が不安定 コントローラー接続するまで何度もやらないと繋がらない、繋がっても妙にラグい ドライバーの削除とか試したけどダメ ・AirLink接続時、VR上でデスクトップ操作するとoculusメニューが落ちてVRゲーム側も操作不能になる 1分ほど待つと復活する
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Replying to @KimKatieUSA
Her rap name is “oculus sinister” or dexter
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Replying to @majofenrir @acdneo
ese pana cree que andar como un loco buscando los oculus con youtube abierto es divertido
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Replying to @MattPinner_
An oculus VR headset
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Replying to @CuriosityonX
Oculus
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Oculus/Questの有料アプリでこれ出来てたけどやっとブラウザからできるようになったのか〜〜 VRアプリ側も超おすすめなので使ってみてね、Quest2の中古なら2万くらいで買えるはず meta.com/ja-jp/experiences/w…
Prepare for takeoff. ✈️ Flight simulator is now available globally on web to all users. goo.gle/4fBYnWO We've recently added many our most powerful professional desktop features to web. Elevation profiles, new import types, but there's always been one other feature you've been asking us to add to the web version of Google Earth, just for fun... Where will you fly? Share your best maneuvers, views, and flyovers with us!
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あんま面白い話はない あと Oculus (👀という意味
OculasがMetaに買収されたあとの話を赤裸々につづるサブスク
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Replying to @Minibattle_Lop
does this require the oculus vr pc app to be installed? i don't want that malware always taking up resources even when i dont have the app launched
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Replying to @DougWahl1
Anyone who ever had an Oculus Rift and/or a Nintendo Power Glove could have told them that.
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Replying to @CuriosityonX
Oculus. Latin for eye.
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Attributing the lack of continuity to a singular cause (i.e. Islam) is overly simplistic. The lingua franca of the Middle East regularly changed. Akkadian gave way to Imperial Aramaic, Imperial Aramaic was replaced by Classical Syriac and Koine Greek, etc. The spread of Arabic can be regarded as the latest phase in a long pattern of linguistic change. Moreover, the various Arabic "dialects" (some would argue they are separate languages) still retain features inherited from the languages which were spoken in the respective regions prior to Arabic becoming dominant. Moreover, it's worth noting that most of the Middle East had already been Hellenized and later adopted Christianity prior to the spread of Islam. Christianity was hardly any better in Islam in its view of pre-Christian heritage. Medieval Christians treated classical pagan temples as supply stores of "spolia." Rather than going through the trouble of mining fresh stone from mountain quarries, medieval labourers would break the marble from pagan temples and heat the marble in lime kilns to make quicklime, which was the main component in Roman concrete. The only reason the Pantheon exists today in [relatively] pristine condition is because the idols were thrown out and the structure was converted into a church by Byzantine Emperor Phocas as a gift for Pope Boniface IV. The gilded bronze tiles on the Pantheon's dome and the bronze or gilded finial at the top of the oculus were stipped off by order of Emperor Constans II in the 7th century and sent to Constantinople and Pope Urban VIII in the 17th century ordered the bronze from the portico ceiling to be melted down and used for the baldacchino of Bernini in St. Peter's Basilica as well as for the cannons used in the fortification of Castel Sant'Angelo; however, the main structure of the pantheon remained intact because it was stripped of all its pagan idols and dedicated to the Virgin Mary and Christian Martyrs. Likewise, the main reason most of the ruins of the Roman Forum (which was once the bustling civic center of Rome) still stand today is because the Roman Forum became a "Campo Vaccino" ("cow field", i.e. a pasture for grazing cattle and other livestock). As a result, the area became caked in 40 feet of mud, organic waste (mule droppings and cow dung) and silt from the flooding of the Tiber River. Labourers did indeed set up lime kilns near the site and heavily plundered it for spolia, digging through the dirt & manure to break apart ancient marble statues, friezes, etc.; however, they never came close to finding everything because the ground level rose by around 40 feet. In other words, the medieval labourers only found the rocks which were sticking-out & not the ancient structures. Eventually archaeologists in the early 20th century (Giacomo Boni and his team) would discover even more ancient structures at the site such as the Volcanal (also referred to as the "Lapis Niger shrine," named after the slabs of polished black marble which were used when the Romans paved over the site) dedicated to Vulcan/Hephaestus and associated with the site of Romulus' death in antiquity, which contains the famous cippus bearing a boustrophedon inscription dating to 6th century BC that warns against defiling the shine. They also discovered the Sepulcretum (Sepolcreto del Foro Romano) with cremation tombs dating to 10th-century BC (the ashes of the deceased were placed inside hut-shaped pottery urns) and inhumation tombs dating to the 8th-7th century BC.
Replying to @Saatvata
calling the wreckage of cultures caused by islam in the middle east as a "framework" is a misnomer.
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Replying to @burgeoisiee
now get an oculus. Incredible experience
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