I have never meet anyone who has used Jira, only suffered under it. (Though I will say my main complaints about Jira are ideological, rather than purely technical. I would dislike it even if there were 1ms page loads).
This is sick! A few weeks back I made a very, very crude unreal engine AR-camera client to record mixed reality marketing footage for a VR game on a mobile iPad. It was a pain in the butt, I had to rebuild the whole app on every map change and had like no features. It was disheartening to realize that while the tech was there, it seemed like no tools really existed to easily do this (easily and affordably) for small filmmakers. Super happy to see the barrier is being significantly lowered!
I would expect pre-rapid-ubiquity covid tests had a lot to do with this. Speaking personally, the covid testing sites I went to all loved to charge tests as doctor's visits.
I really like the solution Tailwind and some other JavaScript tools have taken to this where instead of a tailwind.json, there’s a tailwind.config.js, which is a plain ol JS file that exports a JS object. Allows for importing constants from other modules, scripting, comments, conditionals, etc
Hello! I think VR headset colocation is super cool and I wanted to try building something with it. I'm currently trying to turn this into an actual laser tag course you can go to, and if you're interested in progress updates putting down your email at https://userland.us is super appreciated.
I recommend thinking about what you can do that would significantly differentiate the gameplay from what is possible irl. Just putting laser tag in VR is a downgrade in many aspects from what you can achieve in reality, so you need a lot of gameplay innovation to make it a compelling proposition.
One small example of where just copying things from real life falls short:
Your proof of concept show walls (because that's what laser tag does to create compelling gameplay) but walls are a mediocre choice in a colocated VR game because the actual behavior (users can always walk through them in VR) defies the user's built in expectations about what it means for something to be a "wall".
Looks like a lot of fun! I went to a co-located VR space for a friend's birthday party once that had wireless backpacks / VR guns and it was a great time.
The place we went shut down (I'm assuming around the pandemic) but had extremely high reviews and people raving about it. Could be a good time to get some funding and start up a new chain.