Magic Leap: Difference between revisions
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== Magic Leap ending support for Magic Leap 1 == | ==Magic Leap ending support for Magic Leap 1== | ||
[[wikipedia:Magic Leap|'''Magic Leap, LLC''']] is a company founded in 2010. Magic Leap creates Augmented Reality (AR) Devices which overlay computer graphics over the user's real life view.<ref>https://www.forbes.com/sites/davidewalt/2016/11/02/inside-magic-leap-the-secretive-4-5-billion-startup-changing-computing-forever/. Retrieved 17 January, 2025. [https://web.archive.org/web/20161103140449/https://www.forbes.com/sites/davidewalt/2016/11/02/inside-magic-leap-the-secretive-4-5-billion-startup-changing-computing-forever/#13f1aaa34223 Archived] from the original on 3 November, 2016. Retrieved 17 January, 2025.</ref> | [[wikipedia:Magic Leap|'''Magic Leap, LLC''']] is a company founded in 2010. Magic Leap creates Augmented Reality (AR) Devices which overlay computer graphics over the user's real life view.<ref>https://www.forbes.com/sites/davidewalt/2016/11/02/inside-magic-leap-the-secretive-4-5-billion-startup-changing-computing-forever/. Retrieved 17 January, 2025. [https://web.archive.org/web/20161103140449/https://www.forbes.com/sites/davidewalt/2016/11/02/inside-magic-leap-the-secretive-4-5-billion-startup-changing-computing-forever/#13f1aaa34223 Archived] from the original on 3 November, 2016. Retrieved 17 January, 2025.</ref> | ||
The first device, Magic Leap 1 released in August of 2018 and retailed for $2,295 USD.<ref>https://appleinsider.com/articles/18/08/08/magic-leap-one-mixed-reality-glasses-launch-in-six-us-cities. Retrieved 17 January, 2025. [https://web.archive.org/web/20180809022213/https://appleinsider.com/articles/18/08/08/magic-leap-one-mixed-reality-glasses-launch-in-six-us-cities Archived] from the original on 9 August, 2018. Retrieved 17 January, 2025.</ref> Their most recent device, the Magic Leap 2 released in September of 2022. | The first device, Magic Leap 1 released in August of 2018 and retailed for $2,295 USD.<ref>https://appleinsider.com/articles/18/08/08/magic-leap-one-mixed-reality-glasses-launch-in-six-us-cities. Retrieved 17 January, 2025. [https://web.archive.org/web/20180809022213/https://appleinsider.com/articles/18/08/08/magic-leap-one-mixed-reality-glasses-launch-in-six-us-cities Archived] from the original on 9 August, 2018. Retrieved 17 January, 2025.</ref> Their most recent device, the Magic Leap 2 released in September of 2022. | ||
=== Incident === | ===Incident=== | ||
On August 30th, 2023 Magic Leap sent an email to customers announcing the end-of life of the Magic Leap 1 after December 31st, 2024. In the same email they also announced the shutdown of the Magic Leap 1 developer forum and Discord channel on September 29th, 2023.<ref>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=37322435. Retrieved 18 January, 2025, [https://web.archive.org/web/20250118142709/https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=37322435 Archived] from the original on 18 January, 2025, Retrieved 18 January, 2025.</ref> They also released an article detailing the end of life of their product, the Magic Leap 1. In this article, they explain that the device will no longer be supported. As the article states, the device core functionality including the device and its apps as well as cloud services are no longer available. This means that the device is now no longer usable by any end user who had purchased the product. In the article, they encourage users to purchase a Magic Leap 2 (priced at $3,499)<ref>https://www.adorama.com/mlm90aa004.html</ref> to continue using their services and applications.<ref name=":0">https://www.magicleap.care/hc/en-us/articles/18878883445645-Magic-Leap-1-End-of-Life. Retrieved 17 January, 2025. [https://web.archive.org/web/20250111133355/https://www.magicleap.care/hc/en-us/articles/18878883445645-Magic-Leap-1-End-of-Life Archived] from the original on 11 January, 2025. Retrieved 17 January, 2025.</ref> | On August 30th, 2023 Magic Leap sent an email to customers announcing the end-of life of the Magic Leap 1 after December 31st, 2024. In the same email they also announced the shutdown of the Magic Leap 1 developer forum and Discord channel on September 29th, 2023.<ref>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=37322435. Retrieved 18 January, 2025, [https://web.archive.org/web/20250118142709/https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=37322435 Archived] from the original on 18 January, 2025, Retrieved 18 January, 2025.</ref> They also released an article detailing the end of life of their product, the Magic Leap 1. In this article, they explain that the device will no longer be supported. As the article states, the device core functionality including the device and its apps as well as cloud services are no longer available. This means that the device is now no longer usable by any end user who had purchased the product. In the article, they encourage users to purchase a Magic Leap 2 (priced at $3,499)<ref>https://www.adorama.com/mlm90aa004.html</ref> to continue using their services and applications.<ref name=":0">https://www.magicleap.care/hc/en-us/articles/18878883445645-Magic-Leap-1-End-of-Life. Retrieved 17 January, 2025. [https://web.archive.org/web/20250111133355/https://www.magicleap.care/hc/en-us/articles/18878883445645-Magic-Leap-1-End-of-Life Archived] from the original on 11 January, 2025. Retrieved 17 January, 2025.</ref> | ||
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[[File:Magic Leap 1 End of Life Article.jpg|thumb|Screenshot of the Magic Leap 1 End of Life Article from their webpage.]] | [[File:Magic Leap 1 End of Life Article.jpg|thumb|Screenshot of the Magic Leap 1 End of Life Article from their webpage.]] | ||
=== Reverse-Engineering Efforts === | |||
There is a community-led reverse-engineering project to revive the ML1, mostly organized in the unofficial Magic Leap discord server, available at the following invite link: https://discord.gg/n8wxfcbyjh. The modified Linux kernel for the proprietary Lumin OS used on the ML1 device is available at https://github.com/magicleap/kernel-lumin. | |||
== References == | After a request was sent to Magic Leap requesting the source for the bootloader under the mistaken assumption that it was modified from the GPLv2-licensed U-Boot, it was provided<ref>https://www.reddit.com/r/magicleap/comments/1c2unmc/magic_leap_inc_modified_ubootbootloader_software/. Retrieved 23 January, 2025. [https://web.archive.org/web/20241216171432/https://www.reddit.com/r/magicleap/comments/1c2unmc/magic_leap_inc_modified_ubootbootloader_software/ Archived] from the Original on 16 December, 2024. Retrieved 23 January, 2025</ref><ref>https://archive.org/details/tegra-bootloader.tar. Retrieved 23 January, 2025</ref>. However, it turns out that this boot-loader is not based on U-Boot, and is instead an NVIDIA CBoot/nvtboot-based bootloader. The archive is also missing the following: | ||
* tegrabl_secu | |||
* The entire hwinc-t18x directory normally provided by NVIDIA's CBoot source package | |||
* The "common" directory that is normally a peer to the t18x-partner directory (this is a different directory from the "common" that is a child directory under t18x-partner | |||
* Several header files including tegrabl_lp5523.h, ml_board_hw_id.h, ml_nrf_mux_process.h, mlconfig.h | |||
==References== | |||
<references /> | <references /> | ||