Did a search and nothing comes up.
http://www.techradar.com/us/reviews/wearables/samsung-gear-vr-s6-1286670/review
Q: Wot m8, da fug is dad booshid?
A: A second generation plastic cradle/dock designed for the Galaxy S6/S6-Edge that houses focus-able lenses and a small fan to avoid lens fogging that you strap on your head. It has a port that you can charge it from, and I have one of those lithium packs I plug in that goes in my shirt pocket and works great, otherwise it drains the phone battery fast. Best to use with wired headphones/buds.
Pros:
1) Shitballs is VR amazing! So much better than my really crappy first experience back in the day. My first question of course was "ya ya, but is there porn for it", and the answer is yes and 3D boobs up in your grill is pretty awesome (virtual real porn is a big content provider). Brings new meaning to first-person-shooter.
2) I feared the headtracking would be like TrackIR5 for the PC which I have, and no way Jose it is about a kajillionx10^zillion times better. It just WORKS... period. And yes, in the theater mode if you set it to "blank" or whatever its called theater, if you lay down or recline in an airplane seat or whatever it automatically asks you if you want to reorient the screen.
3) I hate mobile gaming... hate. Like Hitler/Jew relationship status. But with VR... k, yeah, that's pretty cool. Daddy like.
4) Watching your own content in theater mode, its not going to rival my projector/home theater setup at home, but for my super long flight to Thailand I can see this being a KILLER way to waste time as it really does kinda feel like you're sitting in a movie theater with some popcorn, or on the surface of the moon looking down at Earth (all kinds of weird modes that are actually pretty awesome, considering how the light from the screen reflects off the environment).
5) Good seal with memory foam stuff on there and zero light leakage on even my Edge model which I was worried about.
Cons:
1) Resolution: The screen door effect is supposedly reduced on the Galaxy S6 version compared to the VR1, but its still definitely there. You really notice the hit in resolution when watching TV shows and people are walking from the distance and I can't even make out who they are as there just isn't enough resolution there. It does help to re-encode your own video (and you may have to, that's another con) with really high bitrate 720p footage. Its not horrible, but its definitely a step backwards like going from BluRay back to DVD.
2) It won't play back DTS audio, just stereo (or some other proprietary surround sound thing, forget the name) because they didn't want to pay the license... cheap bastards! Playing back 1080p is a waste, and the S6 has no SD card, so best to keep high bitrate 720p encoding stereo sound with handbrake.
3) OVERHEATING! My phone was overheating after about 20 mins, but I was able to resolve it by completely wiping my phone (and phone cache), setting it up as a new device, and also directing a desk fan at my head. No heat issues have occurred yet, but googling I found I'm not alone. That works at home and maybe even on a flight since you can direct those fan things at your head, but maybe not everywhere. I also wasn't using the external battery pack before which supplies the power, and that may also have helped reduce temps.
4) BULKY/Hard to keep clean! Its a bigass device (although 15% ligher and with more/better straps than VR1 model), and I have two cats and you really need a compressed can of air because not only do you have to worry about the inside part like on a Oculus, but because the phone unclicks and exposes the other side of the lenses, that's another surface to keep debris off. A single hair magnified is very noticeable. It does come with a nice microfiber thingy, but expect you'll have to wipe the lenses on both sides, blow compressed air, and of course any fingerprints off your phone every time before you use it.
5) Overpriced... its $200 for what isn't all that fancy of tech. It should really be half that as a reasonable street price.
http://www.techradar.com/us/reviews/wearables/samsung-gear-vr-s6-1286670/review
Q: Wot m8, da fug is dad booshid?
A: A second generation plastic cradle/dock designed for the Galaxy S6/S6-Edge that houses focus-able lenses and a small fan to avoid lens fogging that you strap on your head. It has a port that you can charge it from, and I have one of those lithium packs I plug in that goes in my shirt pocket and works great, otherwise it drains the phone battery fast. Best to use with wired headphones/buds.
Pros:
1) Shitballs is VR amazing! So much better than my really crappy first experience back in the day. My first question of course was "ya ya, but is there porn for it", and the answer is yes and 3D boobs up in your grill is pretty awesome (virtual real porn is a big content provider). Brings new meaning to first-person-shooter.
2) I feared the headtracking would be like TrackIR5 for the PC which I have, and no way Jose it is about a kajillionx10^zillion times better. It just WORKS... period. And yes, in the theater mode if you set it to "blank" or whatever its called theater, if you lay down or recline in an airplane seat or whatever it automatically asks you if you want to reorient the screen.
3) I hate mobile gaming... hate. Like Hitler/Jew relationship status. But with VR... k, yeah, that's pretty cool. Daddy like.
4) Watching your own content in theater mode, its not going to rival my projector/home theater setup at home, but for my super long flight to Thailand I can see this being a KILLER way to waste time as it really does kinda feel like you're sitting in a movie theater with some popcorn, or on the surface of the moon looking down at Earth (all kinds of weird modes that are actually pretty awesome, considering how the light from the screen reflects off the environment).
5) Good seal with memory foam stuff on there and zero light leakage on even my Edge model which I was worried about.
Cons:
1) Resolution: The screen door effect is supposedly reduced on the Galaxy S6 version compared to the VR1, but its still definitely there. You really notice the hit in resolution when watching TV shows and people are walking from the distance and I can't even make out who they are as there just isn't enough resolution there. It does help to re-encode your own video (and you may have to, that's another con) with really high bitrate 720p footage. Its not horrible, but its definitely a step backwards like going from BluRay back to DVD.
2) It won't play back DTS audio, just stereo (or some other proprietary surround sound thing, forget the name) because they didn't want to pay the license... cheap bastards! Playing back 1080p is a waste, and the S6 has no SD card, so best to keep high bitrate 720p encoding stereo sound with handbrake.
3) OVERHEATING! My phone was overheating after about 20 mins, but I was able to resolve it by completely wiping my phone (and phone cache), setting it up as a new device, and also directing a desk fan at my head. No heat issues have occurred yet, but googling I found I'm not alone. That works at home and maybe even on a flight since you can direct those fan things at your head, but maybe not everywhere. I also wasn't using the external battery pack before which supplies the power, and that may also have helped reduce temps.
4) BULKY/Hard to keep clean! Its a bigass device (although 15% ligher and with more/better straps than VR1 model), and I have two cats and you really need a compressed can of air because not only do you have to worry about the inside part like on a Oculus, but because the phone unclicks and exposes the other side of the lenses, that's another surface to keep debris off. A single hair magnified is very noticeable. It does come with a nice microfiber thingy, but expect you'll have to wipe the lenses on both sides, blow compressed air, and of course any fingerprints off your phone every time before you use it.
5) Overpriced... its $200 for what isn't all that fancy of tech. It should really be half that as a reasonable street price.