Although VR devices have appeared for many years, the real outbreak should be counted to 2016. This CES is really the year of VR outbreak. The news of VR is overwhelming, and the price is not as unbearable as before. VR is the next trend, there is no doubt about that.
In 2016, only about 13 million PCs in the world can guarantee the smooth experience of VR devices, accounting for less than 1% of the global 1.43 billion PCs, which is a business opportunity. HP clearly saw this, so they chose to cooperate with HTC to develop an Envy Phoenix game desktop for the latter's Vive headworn VR device, hoping to achieve better virtual reality game effects.
In terms of configuration, Envy Phoenix uses Intel Core i7 K series processors, and has a 2TB hard disk. The graphics card can choose AMD Radeon R9 390x or NVIDIA GTX980Ti. In addition, Envy Phoenix is equipped with a liquid cooling system. Users can determine the instant temperature of the device through the LED lights on the chassis surface, which can be said to be an ultra-high configuration.
At the same time, the display resolution of VR devices has always been the bottleneck of their development. HP's new technology can enable virtual images to be displayed at the correct resolution. Its minimum price of 1700 dollars is also cheaper than expected, and the listing time is January 16.
However, HTC Vive has not been officially released at present. It is still under development and has not yet evolved to its final form, so we cannot experience the real strength of Envy Phoenix in virtual reality games for the time being. HTC Vive will be officially released in a few months. I hope to experience the full form of Envy Phoenix+Vive.
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