The tech giant company, Google, will no longer offer Google VR Cardboard headset. It is considered the cheapest virtual headset in the market. The software giant company previously announced its ...
Google Cardboard might be just about the worst way to experience virtual reality, but its accessible smartphone-led approach makes it the best VR headset for those on a budget. You won't find Google's ...
The drawn-out death of VR on Android is now more or less complete as the Google Store has ceased selling its Google Cardboard DIY VR goggles. Mobile VR solutions are not truly dead, but after Android ...
Looking for an easy and affordable way to give this whole virtual reality craze a try? It doesn’t get much simpler than Google Cardboard… and right now it doesn’t get much cheaper either, because ...
Steven Musil is a senior news editor at CNET News. He's been hooked on tech since learning BASIC in the late '70s. When not cleaning up after his daughter and son, Steven can be found pedaling around ...
In the 19 months it has been on the market, over 5 million units of Google Cardboard have been shipped. That's a huge jump from last May when the company announced during Google I/O that it had ...
A few months after making its Cardboard VR platform open source, Google has quietly ended sales for its Cardboard VR, the inexpensive cardboard-based phone viewers that could be used to experience ...
Google cut a template out of cardboard, you know, the brown stuff used to make boxes. They added some lenses, magnets, Velcro, stickers and a rubber band. They folded up the cardboard and glued ...
So far, Google’s experiments in virtual reality have mostly been done through Cardboard, the search giant’s super-cheap device that can convert any smartphone into a VR rig. But Cardboard isn’t the ...
The Oculus Rift and HTC Vive are incredible devices, but they're far out of the range of an impulse purchase for most of us. We're talking about spending $600 to $800 on a headset and accessories ...
Google Cardboard promised a simple Virtual Reality solution that didn't break the bank, costing just $20, presuming that the consumer already had a smartphone. The simple Google Cardboard setup ...