Mozilla

Mozilla is retiring its virtual and augmented reality web browser Firefox Reality, passing the baton to an outside team that plans to relaunch it under a new name. Free software consultancy Igalia is developing a browser using the source code underlying Firefox Reality, aiming to launch a comparable VR / AR browser called Wolvic next week. Meanwhile, Mozilla will remove Firefox Reality from app stores in the next few weeks.

In a blog post, Mozilla framed the change as a natural evolution for Firefox Reality, which launched in 2018. ā€œWeā€™ve been at the forefront of developing new technologies,ā€ the organization said, citing the WebVR and WebAR standards. ā€œIn some instances, Mozilla continues to remain the host and incubator of those new technologies … With other technologies, we find communities and organizations where our projects can continue to grow and contribute to the web.ā€ Igalia has previously contributed to the WebKit and Chromium open-source projects.

Firefox Reality is currently available on the Meta Quest (formerly Oculus Quest) headset, HTCā€™s Viveport platform, and the Pico standalone VR headset, as well as Microsoftā€™s HoloLens mixed reality headset. On top of letting users browse traditional web pages in headsets, itā€™s a portal to full-fledged web-based VR and AR experiences ā€” a platform thatā€™s often overlooked in comparison with native headset apps but that offers a more open alternative to curated app stores. (Meta also offers its own built-in web browser on the Quest.) As antitrust watchdogs scrutinize Metaā€™s VR ambitions and companies across the tech industry invest in AR, Wolvic could bolster the viability of web-based mixed reality ā€” assuming it stays active.

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