Virtual reality is still a niche hobby, but a small British startup is one of the first-movers in building games for the emerging medium. Curiscope is a 10-person, Brighton-based startup which raised ...
The Curiscope Virtuali-Tee is one of our favorite uses of mobile augmented reality technology, as it neatly combines educational benefits with some jaw-dropping visuals that inspire both awe and yucks ...
“It’s just semantics. Virtual reality and augmented reality are the same thing, the same experience, and it’s only marketing that divides them.” That’s the opinion of Ben Kidd, founder of Curiscope, a ...
Curiscope, a U.K. augmented and virtual reality content startup, has raised a $1 million seed round led by LocalGlobe, the seed VC firm founded by Saul and Robin Klein. Ascension Ventures, Force over ...
When it comes to augmented and virtual reality, Ed Barton has been there and got the T-shirt. His Brighton-based startup Curiscope produces The Virtuali-Tee, a garment printed with a stylised QR code ...
Remember the show The Magic School Bus that featured episodes where we got to dive into the blood stream to learn about biology? Well, now we can experience what it feels like to get inside the body ...
Over recent years, augmented reality (AR) and virtual reality (VR) has burst onto the market as an exciting medium for entertainment – think Oculus Rift, PlayStation VR… even Pokémon Go. Yet while ...
Curiscope, the makers of the mixed reality Virtuali-tee educational app, just launched Operation Apex (2017), an underwater exploration and adventure game developed in partnership with HTC Vive ...
X-ray vision is a superpower most of people wish they had and now it's possible with help of a smart t-shirt and app. Curiscope has designed Virtuali-Tee, a smart t-shirt that lets you peek inside the ...
Virtuali-Tee reveals wearer's guts, heart, lungs and kidneys in graphic pulsating 3D. Kids will love the gruesome innards but parents will appreciate the deep contextual learning. A new Kickstarter ...
Biology textbooks aren’t exactly the most stimulating way of learning about the human body and that’s why a new British start-up has decided to bring our innards to life through augmented and virtual ...
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