The metaverse is under construction, and many businesses want to know how to pioneer their corner of this virtual reality. CNN regularly defines the metaverse and addresses future ethical concerns regarding its existence.
For even the most experienced journalist, defining this new technology is difficult. For example, is the metaverse an extension of the “internet,” or is it a completely different technology? Furthermore, since the metaverse resides inside enabled devices, is this new device more like a smartphone, or are we looking at another mobile device with something besides the internet?
Because this is uncharted territory and a brand new idea – much like the internet was decades ago – it’s important to define this pace through questions instead of absolutes. Even criticisms can lead to a better build for metaverse spaces in the future. Like the early internet, we find what we want by defining what we don’t want. Good questions include:
At the end of the COVID pandemic, Mark Zuckerberg decided to change Facebook’s name to Meta and begin constructing the metaverse through his Oculus Quest 2 headset. This was the natural consequence of pandemic conditions. With people stuck sheltering at home, Zuckerberg tried to find a way to break them out.
The pandemic’s most severe consequences ended over a year ago, though, and people are back out there living life again and enjoying reality. So what Metaverse supporters must do now is find another deeper and more meaningful reason to build this universe. Is it still viable? Who would want to visit a virtual reality frequently? And what metaverse business opportunities exist out there for people who are passionate about this technology?
The pandemic created a unique problem that didn’t exist before it: how to feel together even when we’re alone. The early metaverse promises social experiences beyond text communication on social media websites. Will it live up to this promise? We’re already finding out.
Businesses aren’t waiting around for the metaverse to be a fully realized universe. Instead, they’re already hard at work building their corner of it. From virtual offices to blockchain automation, businesses see opportunities where the general public doesn’t.
Additionally, companies can use the metaverse for employee training and development, allowing workers to practice skills and procedures in a virtual reality before applying them in the real world. The metaverse offers endless possibilities for education and training, making it an exciting area to watch as technology evolves.
Businesses that get in on this technology early are the people who define it. It’s a chance to take the internet’s original promise and do it right now: to expand the online world away from just text and pictures and make it a real, living, breathing social space.
This website uses cookies.