Working / Writing in VR

Recently I stumbled upon an interesting article. "Working from Orbit. VR Productivity in (or Above) a WFA World" (you can find it here: https://blog.immersed.team/working-from-orbit-39bf95a6d385). 

As you might know, I've got an Oculus Quest now quite some time and I have to admit I didn't use it much this or the past year. 
Although it is a great device, I sometimes forget that I've got it and that I should use it more. Also, I don't have enough space inside my Apartment to fully use the room-scale features it provides.

Anyway, after reading the article I was sold on the idea of working in VR. And now I'm sitting here in a spaceship above the earth while writing this article. 

I'm not sure how to describe it. It is definitely something different. I don't see anything other than my MacBooks screen and the earth on one side and endless space on the other. I think we are currently orbiting above Africa as far as I can tell.

I think I will try some writing and coding sessions with this new "distraction" free environment. I will keep you updated :). Maybe it is the new way of working for me?
I've thought about the applications of
VR
to create yourself a super office/workspace... like work in outerspace or in the grand canyone.

honestly it sounds fucking dope. and that's what makes me think, it's too good to be true.

I do think that in the beginning this will be in vogue. People will praise VR created office spaces as even superior to a regular 'meat/concrete' office, but in the long run people will much rather prefer a nice officespace with a good view that's not in VR. At least for their workday. 
2021-10-05 15:33:18
Well, I was trying to implement a few things a day later, and after half an hour of coding “in space”, I was fully immersed. I don’t think my brain was fully sure it wasn’t real. But one thing is for sure, the resolution of the Quest 1 is a little bit to little to work perfectly. I couldn’t get a fully sharp picture of my working desktop no matter how hard I tried. A Quest 2 (which the guy uses in the article) would probably solve the problem, but I’m not going to invest 400€ to find out. Well not yet :)
2021-10-07 18:48:56