No, thanks!<p>At that price point I think it makes sense to hold off and see what Microsoft does with the Hololens 2. I think they’ll be able to undercut this price and have less cropping.
Since the website tells you nothing but the price, the Magic Leap is<p>> a head-mounted virtual retinal display... which superimposes 3D computer-generated imagery over real world objects, by "projecting a digital light field into the user's eye"... Magic Leap asserts that it achieves better resolution with a new proprietary technique that projects an image directly onto the user's retina...<p><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magic_Leap" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magic_Leap</a>
> To help you take your first step into spatial computing, we’re going to hand deliver the device to your doorstep and personally get you set up.<p>Someone has read Paul Graham's "Do things that don't scale" essay :)
Gotta love it when the headline of their marketing website is a flat-out lie. Most people cannot, in fact, "get" a Magic Leap. It's not even being offered for sale to the public.<p>When lies this clumsy and big are evident this early in a company's history, the prognosis is poor.