Most of us still have not donned the Oculus Rift virtual reality (VR) headset, but in one
of the major centers of global innovation, the high-tech and big-money city of
Dubai, the move toward VR in various industries is alive and well.
As a key landmark in this journey, a recent report shows Australian actress Nicole Kidman starring in a fully immersive, 3-D
virtual reality film now showing on Samsung headsets used by travelers on
Etihad Airways, a major United Arab Emirate (UAE) airline.
The sky isn’t the only place that virtual reality is taking
hold in the Emirates, however. The same report, for example, describes a gaming project
called Hub Zero that’s being developed by a Dubai-based company, and is set to
equip Dubai’s City Walk project with various attractions and rides based on a “new
dimension” of virtual gaming.
Not to be outdone, officials in Egypt are working on a much
different project that, instead of propelling us furiously into the future,
drags us far back into the past.
In this case, an American firm is working with the Egyptian
government to set up a new virtual reality experience related to the 1922 discovery
of King Tutankhamun’s tomb.
“The discovery of King Tutankhamun’s tomb in November
1922 was an unprecedented event,” Fathi Saleh, an honorary director at
Egypt’s Center for Documentation of Cultural and Natural Heritage, said. “The content of the discovery, which is the most
valuable treasure found worldwide, contains more than 4,000 pieces. Now, with
the advanced information technology tools, including virtual and augmented
reality, one can simulate … the discovery and the richness of the treasure in a
very realistic way.”
All of the above moves toward more immersive virtual reality
experiences are exciting, but Rik Willard, the founder and managing director of
Agentic Group, sees even more innovation on the horizon.
“To me, the more exciting opportunities are going to be B2B.”
Willard told the Gulf News Journal, citing tele-surgery where VR
robots could revolutionize the capability of health care providers.
On a broader level, Willard said, VR will tie into other key
technologies, such as 3-D printing, and payment technologies like Blockchain,
to really change the way that business works.
“We see the convergence happening very quickly.” Willard
said. “There are all of these technologies that we’ll take for granted 20 to 30
years in the future that are groundbreaking right now.”
Willard’s company helps businesses to sort through the hype
that he says surrounds a lot of these technologies, to make good choices in
anticipating what’s in store for the future.
All of this progress, he said, won’t come without a few hiccups.
Willard cited the rapid changes to banking that are bound to
occur when cryptocurrencies and digital payment methods really emerge on the
scene.
“What happens to banks when people can make payments effortlessly?” Willard
said. “When smartphones get cheap, everyone will have them. What happens when
(thousands of previously un-banked consumers) come crashing into the global
economy? It’s an interesting conversation.”
In a lot of cases, Willard said, responses to new
technologies come down to questions about the values that we each have
individually, and the values that we share.
Willard said he hopes to be able to educate Agentic’s customers, to
make them more able to handle the rapid changes that are going to emerge from
critical mass progress in virtual-reality and other fields — changes that are
likely to have huge and unanticipated impacts on our world sooner, rather than
later.



