Connections

3rd i QC to Tackle VR, AR Experiences, Applications

Culver City, Calif.-based media and entertainment quality-control specialist 3rd i QC announced Sept. 20 that it was opening a dedicated virtual reality and augmented reality QC space, a nod to one of the industry’s fastest growing technologies.

Ramón Bretón, 3rd i’s CTO, told the Media & Entertainment Services Alliance (MESA) that the new VR/AR consumer testing area will address the higher technical requirements of the technologies, but still keep the company’s mission in mind: making sure consumers have a frustration-free entertainment experience.

“We approach VR as we do all new technologies – from the end user’s point of view. Yes, VR experiences are more technologically-advanced than previous media, but the consumer must still have a frustration-free experience,” Bretón said. “On DVD, there was a clear distinction between the menus – the user interface (UI) – and the content – the user experience (UX). On Blu-ray, these started to overlap a little as the menus could be overlaid during the program.

“With smartphone apps, and now in particular with VR, the UI and the UX are merged. In VR, when the user interacts, the experience changes. The impact this has on the end user’s reaction to the content is significant.”

Al Limón, 3rd i’s CEO and co-founder, called the influx of VR content and apps is putting entertainment technology at a “a pre-exploding point.”

“Also, for the first time, a piece of home entertainment content can have a severe physiological effect on the consumer,” he added. “The last thing a new technology needs is bad publicity, dampening early adoption. Part of our responsibility in protecting our clients’ valuable product, not to mention their reputation, is reporting on a virtual reality experience’s potential for cybersickness – the nausea and/or disorientation that some people feel when engaging with VR.”

3rd i will provide third-party independent reviews to look for issues that pop up that content producers may miss, and keep an especially close eye on ensuring smooth integration of interface and experience, and evaluating content for visual or auditory anomalies.