VR Hypersuit takes you out of this world

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Virtual reality (VR), it seems, is taking over the world – from art gallery interactive displays to property agents using it to woo potential buyers. However, the true domain for VR is the home, where it can be used to relax and allow you to let your hair down and simply enjoy yourself.

Cue the Hypersuit. Billed as “the safest way to sense the extreme,” the Hypersuit VR simulator allows you to explore the far reaches of the world and beyond without leaving the comfort of your home. It takes you to vast deserts, the moon and even lets you fly across the sky, free as a bird.

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Built by a Paris-based startup, the Hypersuit is an exoskeleton that fully immerses you into VR. To make the simulator work, users lie on a movable exoskeleton platform with a VR headset on. They can then control an in-game character and move in any direction they please. The VR simulator – which is completely controlled by arm movements – lets users fly, dive into the ocean and travel in space. If your arm moves to the right, your body will follow the same direction in the virtual setting. It also comes with a fan featuring automatically adjustable wind speed, depending on the activity.

The Hypersuit was unveiled earlier this year at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, the world’s biggest technology trade show.

www.hypersuit.fr

Save your skin with a sun protection regime

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No one likes to get sunburnt. It’s painful and – let’s face it – looking like a lobster is embarrassing. But of even more concern is that each instance of sunburn damages skin cells and accelerates the process of premature ageing. As the weather starts to heat up and the beach beckons, get ready to suit up – and we’re not just talking bikinis here. Be sure to don a protective layer of a sun-blocking product with an SPF (sun protection factor) of at least 30 to shield your skin from harmful UV rays.

One new product that will do the trick is Giorgio Armani’s Maestro UV Skin Defense Primer. The primer can be worn on naked skin or underneath your daily makeup, and it contains none of the opacifying minerals that are the culprits of white splotches. Nearly 94 percent of women polled by the brand said they could not detect any trace of the primer once they had applied it to their skin. It has an SPF of 50 and PA++ (the highest level of protection is ++++), so those UV rays don’t stand a chance.

 

 “Don a protective layer of a sun-block product with an SPF of at least 30 to shield your skin from harmful UV rays”

Another SPF 50 range comes courtesy of Dior. The brand’s Diorsnow UV Shield contains edelweiss extract and has an airy texture that guarantees streak-free protection. Another product in the line-up is the liquid Colour-Control Crème, which hydrates and brightens the skin while blocking out UV rays.

The skincare professionals at Lancôme have released the aptly-named UV Expert line. Targeting urban dwellers, the products are designed to protect against UV rays as well as harmful pollutants that damage the skin and cause wrinkles. One standout product, the SPF 50 Youth Shield Aqua Gel, is said to be suitable for all skin types – even sensitive skin – and contains ultra-hydrating ingredients. With no shortage of sophisticated UV-blockers on the market, there really is no excuse not to slap on some sunscreen before suiting up for a sunny siesta by the seashore.

Ain’t it Grande: The world’s most lavish cognac

Cognac-Henri-IV-Dudognon-Heritage-Gold-24K-SilverCognac has long been considered one of the more refined spirits, enjoyed by emperors and kings and coveted by noblemen and women alike. It might not, therefore, come as a complete shock to learn that the world’s most expensive cognac will set you back a right royal US$1,982,300 per 100cl bottle. Best sipped not sculled. This most decadent of drops is the Henri IV Dudognon Heritage Cognac Grande Champagne and has been dubbed in some quarters as ‘the DNA’ of cognacs. Produced since 1776, this ultra-fine liquor is aged in barrels for more than 100 years. While the cognac itself is undoubtedly lavish, a good deal of the expense is also in the bottle that holds this veritable nectar of the gods.

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The bottle is dipped in 24-carat yellow gold and sterling platinum and decorated with no less than 6,500 certified brilliant-cut diamonds. Weighing in at 8 kilograms, the bejewelled bottle is the brainchild of world renowned jeweller Jose Davalos. Named in honour of French King Henri IV – whose descendants are responsible to this day for producing this fine cognac – this spirit is composed of carefully selected grape varieties grown exclusively in the Cognac region. The Henri Dudognon Heritage Cognac Grande Champagne has an alcohol content of 41 percent – although given the price-tag, there’s probably not much chance of anyone getting sozzled on it anytime soon.

Into the Void: VR is a truly visionary medium

People wear Samsung Gear VR devices as they attend the launching ceremony of the new Samsung S7 and S7 edge smartphones during the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain, February 21, 2016. REUTERS/Albert Gea TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY

Virtual reality (VR) is the ultimate example of man meets machine. By simply putting on a VR headset, users can escape the real world and explore pretty much anything in the virtual world. All achieved with ever-improving electronic equipment, typically with a helmet and inbuilt screen or gloves fitted with sensors.
But where did VR originate? The term ‘virtual reality’ was coined by web pioneer Jaron Lanier in 1987, but the concept had been around long before that. In the 1950s, when people still watched black and white TVs and Marilyn Monroe, Elizabeth Taylor and Elvis were wowing the public, American inventor and cinematographer Morton Heilig invented the first interactive multimedia device, the Sensorama, in 1957.

Heilig’s invention gave users the illusion of reality by immersing them in a 3-D motion picture with smells, stereo sound, seat vibrations and wind. The viewing holes were surrounded by a series of vents, which were sheltered under a hooded canopy. The 3-D film was viewed through eye portals and filled most of the user’s peripheral vision.
However, as Sensorama was so far ahead of its time, the device was missing the one thing that truly defines a virtual reality experience: a computerised image. Heilig dreamed up his invention long before modern computers and technology caught up to his vision.

cockpit-1442715_960_720_effIn the late 1980s, Lanier’s company – the Visual Programming Lab (VPL) – developed the first multi-person virtual worlds using head-mounted displays, along with the first representations of users within these virtual worlds.

A true visionary, Lanier also saw the benefits of virtual reality beyond just entertainment. Even though militaries had been using flight simulators for years – the first one was commissioned by the US Air Force in 1966 – to train their pilots on how to fly and to deal with problems in a virtual setting, the use of virtual reality technology outside of entertainment was limited. Lanier cottoned onto this and his team developed the first implementations of virtual reality applications for surgery, vehicle interior prototyping, television production and beyond.

This golden era of virtual reality was to be short-lived, however. Even with the release of breakthrough movies such as Tron and The Lawnmower Man, set in the world of virtual reality, by the mid-1990s, the promise of being whisked away to a different world just by donning a headset was trickier and more expensive than people realised.
It wasn’t like today where people can slip on slim headsets and enjoy VR from the comfort of their homes. People in the ‘90s had to go to an arcade and pay over the odds to sit in a giant pod, wear a huge headset to play a game with substandard graphics and sluggish movement from the avatar – and look totally ridiculous in the process. The VR arcade machines in the 1990s and movies using VR brought the technology to the public’s attention, but it wasn’t enough to keep people interested or make them eager enough to pay for the technology. Unsurprisingly, it slowly fizzled out as a form of entertainment.

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It did, however, remain a tool in fields such as medical care and the military. Since 1997, virtual reality has been used to treat patients with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). Georgia Tech released the first version of the Virtual Vietnam VR to treat Vietnam veterans with PTSD. Virtual Vietnam allows users to ride a combat helicopter and walk through a hostile helicopter landing zone in Vietnam. The scenes experienced by the vets through Virtual Vietnam helped them relive and process difficult emotions as a way of curing them.

The technology was not just used to help patients. Research teams in the ’90s developed virtual reality scenarios to help surgeons rehearse real or robotic procedures using advanced computer generated images. Surgery simulators have been invaluable for physician training. VR has also been used to help people get over phobias such as a fear of heights and flying.

Due to advancements in technology over the past two decades, VR can now be the immersive experience it has promised. And when Facebook purchased Oculus – a virtual reality startup – in 2014 for US$2 billion (HK$15.5 billion), developers and investors became convinced the technology had a future.
Shortly after the purchase, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg posted on his Facebook wall: “This is just the start. After games, we’re going to make Oculus a platform for many other experiences. Imagine enjoying a courtside seat at a game, studying in a classroom of students and teachers all over the world or consulting with a doctor face-to-face – just by putting on goggles in your home.”

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Zuckerberg is not the only one with the idea to make VR a platform for more than just games.

Here in Hong Kong, VR is used for fitness, to sell property and by art galleries.

Pure Fitness spent US$450,000 to build the world’s first 270-degree virtual reality screen in a gym in 2015. Fitness fanatics can enjoy a spin class that immerses them in a world where they cycle through space, up the Himalayas and through the streets of cities. ‘Immersive Fitness’ is clearly aimed at attracting younger people to the gym with loud music and shouty instructors. But it’s also unique, as VR fitness tends to be limited to headsets, and working out alone is arguably not as much fun as exploring the virtual world in a room filled with other sweaty cyclists.

The use of VR in property does the opposite, in a way, to that of fitness as it takes the effort out of property hunting. Potential buyers just have to strap on a headset and they are then whisked away on a virtual tour of the property they are interested in buying. All from the comfort of the property agent’s office. The virtual tours are perfect for people looking for a home but who don’t really have the time to traipse around the streets of Hong Kong.

An Oculus VR Inc. Rift Development Kit 2 headset is displayed with a controller during the E3 Electronic Entertainment Expo in Los Angeles, California, U.S., on Wednesday, June 11, 2014. E3, a trade show for computer and video games, draws professionals to experience the future of interactive entertainment as well as to see new technologies and never-before-seen products. Photographer: Patrick T. Fallon/Bloomberg via Getty Images

It is also ideal for people who are looking to buy a house outside of Hong Kong as it eliminates the need to travel. It also suits property agents and developers because all they have to build is a virtual showroom and everything can be contained in the headset rather than in an actual bricks-and-mortar showroom. Developers like Sino Land have taken advantage of the advancement in technology with VR tours of its properties in Sai Kung.

It isn’t just property developers who are taking advantage of VR to make sales. At the recent Art Basel in Hong Kong, the use of VR was a star attraction in and around the event. Google showed off the work of five artists that had used Tilt Brush, its 3-D drawing and painting tool.

The exhibition, Virtual Frontiers: Artists Experimenting with Tilt Brush, was a highly successful presentation of VR artworks by the five artists.

“This collaboration extends Art Basel’s interest in the digital realm and how artists approach this topic on different levels,” said Marc Spiegler, Art Basel’s global director.
“Virtual Frontiers allows internationally renowned artists to experiment with new technology and to expand their practice into another dimension.”

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It wasn’t just Google who was getting in on the VR act. Artist Huang Yong Ping made an eight-minute film of his Empires installation, which was viewed through a Samsung Gear headset.

Visitors who donned a headset at Art Basel could decide how close they wanted to get to a piece of art, which aspects of it they wished to view and even move inside the artwork.

Advancements in virtual reality are continuing apace. So whether it’s for purely thrilling entertainment purposes, buying a property or even gleaning a greater appreciation of an enthralling artwork, VR presents fascinating possibilities. Undoubtedly more intriguing developments are just over – and beyond – the horizon.

Text: Andrew Scott

Look your peachiest with these skin brighteners

Clé de Peau Beauté New Brightening Collection

For those struggling with pesky dark spots (also known as “sun” or “age” spots) a range of lightening and whitening products are available to help you combat uneven or patchy skin tones. Designed to give you smoother, clearer skin – as well as reduce hyperpigmentation – there are some stand-out products on the market.

Dior’s Prestige White collection is one such offering, taking inspiration from a rare rose that grows on the cliffs of Normandy in France. Two noteworthy products are the Light-In-Lotion – a gentle rose micro-peel that maximises the light-scattering powers of the skin’s surface – and the Light-InNectar, a deep light-activating serum that lifts the skin’s natural barriers to light circulation and helps renew skin transparency. Another brand to address your needs is Clarins. The White Plus range has been specially designed for Asian skin tones. Containing acerola fruit extract from Brazil, the range comprises of six powerful products that help lighten skin pigmentation and reduce dark spots.

“Designed to give you clearer skin and reduce hyperpigmentation, there are some stand-out products on the market”

Iconic beauty house Clé de Peau Beauté has recently launched its Brightening Collection, which aims to even skintone and reduce dullness. A standout product is the serum, which contains Illuminating Complex EX and increases skin’s clarity and radiance.

If you’re looking for a comprehensive skincare regime, then MTM’s Re-White range has got you covered. Its custom-blended trio of products are designed to work together and create a bright and flawless complexion. Using their years of expertise (the company was founded in 1851) Kiehl’s’ chemists have formulated the Clearly Corrective Brightening and Smoothing Moisture Treatment. Designed to brighten, refine and smooth skin, the treatment targets loss of clarity through two ingredients, glycolic acid and “Activated C.”

AmorePacific’s Luminous Effect Brightening Cream harnesses the goodness of Asian flora and herbs. Derived from fermented green tea, which boosts luminosity, the cream is anti-ageing and helps diminish hyperpigmentation and uneven skintone.

Designers Foersom & Hiort-Lorenzen create stylish outdoor furniture

 

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Scandinavian chic meets flexible design with the new Cane-line Moments Collection available at Everything Under The Sun. Danish designers Foersom & Hiort-Lorenzen combine minimalistic elegance with comfort, creating outdoor furniture that is durable, stylish and elegant. The lounge chair and sofa set feature SoftTouch, an innovative new fabric that has been exclusively created for Cane-line. Weather-proof – after approximately one hour the cushions are dry again – the material is soft to the touch. The perfect addition to any luxury outdoor space, the set is ideal for al fresco evenings. www.everythingunderthesun.com.hk
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Davidoff CEO on enticing new customers, links to the art world

Davidoff’s gregarious CEO, Hans-Kristian Hoejsgaard, was at Art Basel last week to present the brand’s Humidor Damajagua.

The humidor, crafted by renowned French marquetry artist Rose Saneuil, is seen by the company as an ode to the Caribbean.

Saneuil was inspired by Davidoff’s Caribbean heritage and the forest of Damajagua in the Dominican Republic.

The drawing shows a vibrant vermilion bird, a symbol of natural benevolence, swooping over a mystical Caribbean forest, encouraging the tobacco leaves beneath to thrive.

Davidoff has been cultivating filler tobacco in Damajagua since 2002.

The luxury cigar brand also operates the Davidoff Art Initiative, launched in 2012 in the Dominican Republic.

The Art Initiative supports contemporary art and artists in the Caribbean.

We sat down with Hans-Kristian at Art Basel to discuss how Davidoff attracts new clients and its links to the art world.

Sony World Photography Awards announces winner of Hong Kong category

The world’s largest photography competition, the Sony World Photography Awards, has announced the winners of its Open categories and National categories for 2017.

Over 227,596 entries from 183 countries entered the competition.

The National category is open to photographers of all abilities and aims to find the best single photograph taken by a local photographer in 65 countries.

The judges picked The Opposite by Tomy Tong Chun Kin as the winner of the Hong Kong National Award.

The photo is a delicate and original shot taken for a student fashion styling project in January 2016.

“This achievement is really special to me because it has given me recognition. Thank you for all the support from my family and friends. Photography is my whole life,” said Tomy.

Second place went to K.W Hon’s photo Dance, while Wilson Lee’s Moonlight finished third.

Click here to view more photos from the Sony World Photography Awards.

Lotus Exige Sport 380: Arguably the most extreme road car the company has ever made

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In some respects, cars are like clothes. The vehicle one chooses to drive, like the clothes one chooses to wear, reveals to the world certain aspects of wealth, taste and interests – one’s cultural “tribe” and where one fits into its hierarchy.

Spot someone around town wearing a North Face jacket and Columbia boots and it’s a fair bet they are an outdoorsy type, while a Nike and Lycra-clad person is a good candidate for sweaty laps around the running track. What one seldom sees, however, are people wearing the full hobby-clobber outside of context. There is a certain corollary with cars. Driving the new Lotus Exige Sport 380 on the weekly supermarket run is the automotive equivalent of browsing the fruit and veg aisle while wearing full running spikes, a race number and Lycra that leaves nothing to the imagination.

Lotus’ latest iteration of its stripped-out, high-performance coupé is perhaps the most hardcore racing-car-for-the-road that the company has ever made. The Exige is based on the Elise chassis, but with the emphasis on raw, visceral speed, rather than top-down, devil-may-care playfulness.

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The base model Exige started life as an extreme performance machine, bereft of creature comforts. The company then upped the ante by releasing the Sport 350 edition, with more power and less weight. The latest Sport 380 version takes the “more power, less of everything else” approach to the next level.

The price is the first change to grab the attention of would-be buyers. At £67,900 (HK$655,300), some £11,000 more than the Sport 350, the 380 is not a cheap motor. All that extra cash buys an extra 30 horsepower – Lotus having tampered with the same 3.5 litre supercharged V6 motor, now producing 375 horses, instead of 345. The power gains are largely thanks to increased supercharger boost pressure, changes in the ECU computer trickery and an upgraded exhaust borrowed from Lotus’ more civilised Evora sporting grand tourer.
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The sum of £11,000 for 30 horsepower doesn’t sound like money well spent, and on its own it wouldn’t be. But an even more souped-up engine isn’t the full extent of changes from the Sport 350 edition of the Exige. Due to a combination of front-mounted “canards,” a rear wing and a maze of other outlandishly sculpted aerodynamic extras, the new car produces some 60 percent more down force at top speed.

The engine cooling system has also been uprated, enabling fuller use of that more potent engine for longer in warmer weather. The capacity of the fuel tank has also been expanded to 48 litres. Again, with extra endurance in mind.

20161123130318-515ddeaaDespite a bigger tank and radiator, the new car is 15 kg lighter than the older model, thanks to weight-reducing aluminium wheels, as well as carbon fibre seats, a rear wing and diffusers. Before troubling the petrol pump, the Sport 380 weighs in at just 1,066 kg – less than half the mass of a Bentley Continental GT.

The combination of power and light weight makes the Exige Sport 380 predictably fast. The sprint to 62 mph (100 kph) takes 3.7 seconds. While not quite as fast as top-draw (and top-dollar) supercars such as the Ferrari 488 or McLaren 675, it’s still shatteringly quick.

Raw power has never been the Lotus way. The company built its reputation by making cars go fast around bends, rather than in straight lines. In this department, the 380 doesn’t disappoint. The amount of lateral g-force is something of a revelation. It will reveal, for instance, any unwanted poundage that the driver was unaware he or she had, as cornering forces make it wobble to and fro.

20161123130329-8e9cc23bPerhaps even more surprising than the Exige’s capacity for impromptu bodily displacement, is just how manageable the whole experience is. The cornering is stable, un-fussed and controllable. The sheer speed takes a little while to get used to, but it’s never scary. Assuming that the driver has enough stamina for an extended spell behind the wheel, such vast lateral forces start to seem normal.

Approaching a corner, squeezing on the brake pedal immediately brings a surge of deceleration courtesy of the AP racing discs borrowed from Lotus’ 3-Eleven track racer. The car responds almost instantly to the brakes, with almost no time wasted waiting for the suspension to settle as the weight transfers forward. Despite the power-assisted braking and ABS, the middle pedal is very communicative, sending instant tactile messages about how close the front wheels are to locking up.

20161123130327-2e98b3bbThe transition from braking to cornering is similarly smooth. There’s little need to wait for the springs to settle down before exploiting the car’s grip to its full extent. There’s no power steering on the Exige, so the fingertip feel of front wheel grip levels is near-telepathic. The driver knows exactly how well the front rubber is getting along with the tarmac and can make fine adjustments to suit.

Other cars are similarly responsive, but that immediacy usually comes at the price of being skittish and unsettled. The Lotus manages to be both fast and relatively smooth. Of course, the only place that one can safely explore the benefits of all those enhancements is the racetrack. The aerorodynamic downforce only really starts to make a difference at 100 mph or so – well beyond a reasonable speed for negotiating any bends on a public highway.

20161123130327-ec42cdb7So the Exige is an exemplary performer in track conditions, but what about the real world? The first thing one notices is that one needs to be almost as agile as the car itself getting in and out of the low-slung cockpit. Then there’s the noise. The sense of connection with the road means that tyre roar is ever present – fine for the sensory explosion of high-speed thrills, not so fine for an extended motorway cruise. Having completed a journey, the Exige can be surprisingly tricky to park. That lack of power steering means a workout at the wheel during tight manoeuvring, somewhat offset by its feather-light kerb weight.

The Sport 380 is not without some nods towards luxury, however. The carbon fibre seats are comfortable as well as supportive. This model also comes with Bluetooth connectivity for the first time. Perhaps the biggest tick in the comfort box, though, is the ride quality. That forgiving handling translates into fairly supple suspension. It’s not Jaguar XJ smooth, but it’s nowhere near as harsh as you’d fear from so agile a car, making less than perfect roads relatively easy to handle.

The 380’s natural competitor is the Porsche 911 GT3, which is also known for its speed. The 911 wins in terms of badge appeal and display of spending power, at around 50 percent more expensive than the Lotus. It would also win a drag race, but the Exige wins almost everywhere else. It’s faster around the track, has a nicer ride and shows the world you know what to look for in a no-frills thrill machine, beyond the hefty price tag.

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Model                    Lotus Exige Sport 380

From                    £67,900 (HK$655,300) Engine 3.5 litre supercharged V6

Power                    375 bhp at 6,700 rpm

Torque                    302 lb ft at 5,000 rpm

Transmission         Six-speed manual through rear wheel drive

0-62 mph                    3.7 seconds

Top speed                     178 mph

Anti-ageing secrets from the planet’s healthiest places

Beauty_Opening_3What’s the secret to leading a long, healthy life? If you live on the Nicoya peninsula in Costa Rica, on the Greek island of Ikaria or on the Italian island of Sardinia, your odds of living to see 100 are higher than people living elsewhere. So what makes these so-called blue zones such hot-beds for longevity?

Luxury brand Chanel set out for answers, cross-referencing the latest studies on centenarians with what it already knows about ageing. The result: Blue Serum, a product that is said to improve the longevity of skin cells, resulting in a more youthful appearance.

Ingredients sourced from these time-defying areas include Sardinian olive oil, which is rich in essential fatty acids and powerful antioxidants; Greek lentisk, collected from a shrub and known for its regenerating power; and Costa Rican green coffee, which is also rich in antioxidants. Combined in one serum, these ingredients are said to possess the power to make skin appear smoother, firmer and, of course, younger.

“What makes these so-called blue zones such hot-beds for longevity?”

Chanel isn’t alone in its pursuit of the fountain of youth. The Eternalixir Skin-Volumizing oil serum by Bare Minerals uses a natural blend of evening primrose oil, plantain leaf extract, lady’s slipper orchid extract and lavender to deliver a soothing facelift for more radiant and hydrated skin.

A unique product by Fresh – Black Tea Firming Corset Cream – also uses a straight-from-nature formula containing black tea and kombucha with blackberry leaf and lychee seed extracts. When applied to the face and neck, this “immortal elixir” is said to prevent the production of wrinkle-causing factors by more than 50 percent.

Edelweiss – a mountain flower and the main ingredient of the Prodigy Reversis Eye surconcentrate by Helena Rubinstein – was selected for its antioxidants and ability to reinforce cell membranes. Another natural ingredient that is becoming more popular in the beauty world is red ginseng. The plant’s skin-rejuvenating powers are contained in the Timetreasure Renovating Eye serum by South Korean skincare brand Sulwhasoo – and it comes with a uniquely shaped golden eye care massager to brighten the skin around the eyes.

Text: Emily Petsko