Wow, okay, so this whole thing with Meta’s Quest is like a slow burn, right? They’ve been using cameras like forever to track everything—headset, controllers, you name it. But the devs? Nah, they hadn’t been allowed to fiddle with these cameras directly. Then, suddenly, boom! Earlier this year Meta just flips the script. Now devs can play with camera access in their own private sandboxes, and as of now, they can release stuff using this feature to the public. Crazy, huh?
So, this week, there’s this Passthrough Camera API update for Quest. It’s not just a fancy name, it means developers can finally publish apps on the Horizon store that get friendly with the front-facing cameras of Quest 3 and 3S. What does this mean? Well, third-party apps can now scan the world around you and maybe even get a taste of computer vision magic—like tracking things or possibly mapping environments for some cool interactions. The possibilities are kind of endless but also mysterious.
Now think about this: Meta was holding back these capabilities for ages. It’s like they had this amazing tech sitting there, not doing much, because of all those privacy nightmares they’ve had. I mean, they were paranoid—and probably for good reason—about privacy issues. So far, third-party apps could kind of get a gist of your environment but nothing too specific because the system did all the translating.
But then last year, Meta decided to loosen the grip a bit, announcing direct camera access would come. They teased the devs in March, giving them an experimental glimpse of what’s coming, but didn’t let anyone publish these experiments. Until now. Who would’ve thought?
Oh man, some techy stuff here. So, developers get access with some restrictions — like image capture latency is between 40-60ms, and for the geeks who care about performance, there’s a tiny GPU and memory overhead. By the way, I had to look this up because seriously, who keeps these numbers in their head?
And yeah, they have these policies in place, so no funny business with the camera data. Meta’s all about saying, “Use our stuff respectfully, or else.” No spying or identifying users unless they give the big thumbs up. Probably a wise move with their track record.
This whole situation is like a roller coaster, and I’m just here for the ride. Isn’t tech just wild?