Difference between revisions of "Osterhout Design Group"

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==Company chronicle==
 
==Company chronicle==
Osterhout Design Group did not ship the R-9 or the R-8. It did not fulfill all of its R-7 orders. It ran out of money. ODG sought backing from Chinese firms, but sources say that a negative trade environment hampered those efforts.<ref name=vrroom>"AR Glasses Pioneer ODG Is Gone" https://web.archive.org/web/20200814224151if_/https://vrroom.buzz/vr-news/business/ar-glasses-pioneer-odg-gone</ref><ref name="x148"/>
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Osterhout Design Group did not ship the R-9 or the R-8. It did not fulfill all of its R-7 orders. It ran out of money. ODG sought backing from Chinese firms, but sources say that a negative trade environment hampered those efforts.<ref name=vrroom>"AR Glasses Pioneer ODG Is Gone" https://web.archive.org/web/20200814224151if_/https://vrroom.buzz/vr-news/business/ar-glasses-pioneer-odg-gone</ref><ref name="x148"/><ref name="s032">{{cite web | last=Matney | first=Lucas | title=An AR glasses pioneer collapses | website=TechCrunch | date=2019-01-10 | url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190111070612if_/https%3A//techcrunch.com/2019/01/10/an-ar-glasses-pioneer-collapses/ | access-date=2024-10-02}}</ref>
  
There were companies that made offers to buy ODG, including [[Magic Leap]], [[Facebook]], Razer, and [[Lenovo]].
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There were companies that made offers to buy ODG, including [[Magic Leap]], [[Facebook]], Razer, and [[Lenovo]].<ref name="s032"/>
  
Once Magic Leap became controlled by foreign investments, it choked ODG out of existence during the process of having signed an intent letter then backing out.<ref name=vrroom/>
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Once Magic Leap became controlled by foreign investments, it choked ODG out of existence during the process of having signed an intent letter then backing out.<ref name=vrroom/><ref name="s032"/>
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Revision as of 09:44, 2 October 2024

Osterhout Design Group is a company that has made smartglasses.

Their website was osterhoutgroup.com.[1]

Its founder was Ralph Osterhout.[2]

It was located in San Francisco.[2]

Products

Company chronicle

Osterhout Design Group did not ship the R-9 or the R-8. It did not fulfill all of its R-7 orders. It ran out of money. ODG sought backing from Chinese firms, but sources say that a negative trade environment hampered those efforts.[3][2][4]

There were companies that made offers to buy ODG, including Magic Leap, Facebook, Razer, and Lenovo.[4]

Once Magic Leap became controlled by foreign investments, it choked ODG out of existence during the process of having signed an intent letter then backing out.[3][4]

References