Did you see the Microsoft Mesh announcements during Build about avatars and immersive spaces? What do you think: are you ready for these kinds of VR experiences for work? (Pick any option that applies to you)
I’d use an avatar16%
I’m eager to try immersive meetings67%
I’m not personally interested in using avatars or immersive meetings49%
No; a new VR tool doesn’t interest me at all4%
90 PARTICIPANTS
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Daily20%
Weekly38%
Monthly15%
Every few months9%
I have never used a VPN to unblock content.16%
Other (comment below)2%
192 PARTICIPANTS
CTO in Software, 201 - 500 employees
Without a doubt - Technical Debt! It's a ball and chain that creates an ever increasing drag on any organization, stifles innovation, and prevents transformation.Yes, that's what's best for employees.71%
No, that would disrupt business.28%
759 PARTICIPANTS
Community User in Software, 11 - 50 employees
organized a virtual escape room via https://www.puzzlebreak.us/ - even though his team lost it was a fun subtitue for just a "virtual happy hour"
Head of Information Security in Services (non-Government), 1,001 - 5,000 employees
We don't currently offer rewards for reporting phishing, but it's something we're interested in pursuing. We want to reward good behavior and, when people do report phishing attempts, we also want to tell them ...read more
The way i see avatars is a way of augmenting engagement and interaction over virtual mediums and removing un-equitable environments.
Because the avatar will replicate your facial features and body language, you're getting those additional communication feeds. but you can build the avatar to showcase the identity that they identify with, not necessarily what they look like. This could be done humorously or it could be done as a way of building deeper connection's.
altogether a really interesting future ahead of us