Elon Musk probably won't send you into space anytime soon,Han Yi-seul-I (한이슬) Archives but if you want to see what it would like to be up close and personal with Starman and his Tesla, there's always Snapchat.
SEE ALSO: SpaceX just launched the Falcon Heavy, its most powerful rocket, and landed 2 boostersA new Snapchat lens appears as a portal to space. Users can enter, see Starman, and walk right back out. Here's a video of a user testing it in New York's Grand Central Terminal:
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
That lens is just one of the latest products out of SVRF, a tech startup vying to be the best search engine for immersive content like augmented reality (AR) and virtual reality (VR). The website also has an in-house studio that's making creative experiences like the Starman lens for Snapchat.
The popularity comes as millions of Snapchat users are grappling with the app's redesign. A tweet alleging it only take 50,000 retweets to get the old Snapchat back is now the eighth most retweeted tweet of all time. YouTube star Marques Brownlee, also known as MKBHD, spoke out against the company and said he's prioritizing Instagram Stories.
But AR experiences like Starman are exciting some Snapchat users and even former ones.
"As someone who isn't on Snapchat, I opened up Snapchat for the first time in two years because these portals are so damn cool," Cesar Kuriyama, founder of 1 Second Everyday, told Mashable.
But seriously, the update is really getting some people mad.
For SVRF CEO and founder Sophia Dominguez, the viral lenses are among her effort to move the world beyond experiences isolated on their phone. She became interested in the topic while reading Feed, a young adult dystopian novel by M.T. Anderson, when she was 13.
"Everything is AR and VR. People have chips in the brains and it's all advertising driven. When I read it, I freaked out. That's why I don't have Facebook because Facebook is that future, but I love the imagination. I knew I wanted to work on whatever is the past the phone," Dominguez said.
Back in 2013, Google Glass was viewed as one way to take us beyond the phone. Dominguez decided to apply for a pair as part of the Explorer program and then traveled the world, including Madrid, Barcelona, Paris, London, Berlin, Dubai, Goa, and Mumbai, with them.
Now, at 25, she's building SVRF, with a team of five out of an office in New York City. She's raised $725,000 from angel investors, including Giphy founder Alex Chung, First Round's Product Co-op, and Techstars.
Since Snapchat released Lens Studio, the SVRF team has been building experiences like Starman as well as a play on Pickle Rick from Ricky and Morty. Pickle Rickdancing in a mansion has more than 1 million views on Snapchat, and counting:
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Those experiences are exclusive to Snapchat, and yet, they aren't easy to find there. Instead, her team and the fan community has been promoting them across Reddit, Twitter, and their own social channels. The subreddit r/SnapLenses has nearly 120,000 subscribers.
"An early version of SVRF was StumbleUpon of VR. After testing we realized people would want to search for their next experience, like now I want to see a snowman or now I want to be in Rome," Dominguez said.
Snapchat is far from the only destination for AR content. The SVRF team has used Facebook's Camera Studio as well. However, that's been better for face lenses rather than for portals, Dominguez said. She also is planning to build own AR app and API for VR-enabled devices.
Already, Dominguez has been quite happy with the response to SVRF's AR.
"We're hearing people being like, 'Wow this is unreal. How did you do this?' But somebody did say, 'Hopefully no one is doing this on the street cause you might get run over,'" she said.
Yeah ... stay safe. No portal in the streets!
Topics Snapchat Social Media Tesla Elon Musk
SpaceX lands in Atlantic Ocean, completes historic crew capsule testSpaceX's Crew Dragon test flight successfully docked with the ISSThe most glorious protest signs from UK kids skipping class for climate changeTrump's climate expert is wrong: The world's plants don't need more CO2JBL headphones deal: Get up to 40% off at AmazonExplicit AI 'girlfriend' ads found on Meta platformsBest AirPods Pro deal: New record low price at WalmartStephen King trolls Elon Musk once again over Twitter's name changeAmazon deals of the day: M2 MacBook Air, 2nd gen AirPods Pro, Galaxy Buds 2 Pro, and moreWhy use a VPN?Best gift card deal: Get a free $20 Starbucks gift card when buying a $300 Delta gift cardNYT's The Mini crossword answers for April 29Smart cat shelter uses AI to let strays inside — but no dogs allowedWorld's largest bee rediscovered and now you might never sleep againAlibaba Pictures to buy live events producer Damai · TechNodePrepare for liftoff: Registration for the 2019 MashBash is now open!How to close all tabs on iPhoneStephen Hawking's legacy honoured with new 50p coinChinese phone maker Oppo reportedly to restart inGeely and Baidu’s JV to deliver first model in October after rebranding · TechNode NYC's safe sex guidelines for COVID Elon Musk's Twitter Blue sees a modest 28 new signups within a day of legacy checkmark purge Staff Picks: Life, Summer, Candy by The Paris Review During a pandemic, protest livestreams are more important than ever Paul Hornschemeier on ‘Life with Mr. Dangerous’ by Nicole Rudick Facebook removes 190 white supremacist accounts inciting violence Shiv Roy is the stealthy MVP of 'Succession' Season 4, episode 5 'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for April 23 TPR vs. High Times: The Stoners Win by Cody Wiewandt Pew survey: 'AI will impact jobs, but not mine.' Enjoy watching as a slaver's statue is torn down and dumped in a river Twitter verified a fake Disney Jr. account created by a troll The Subject Talks Back by Deborah Baker Forget your Hogwarts House, here's how you can identify instead After NPR left the platform, Twitter removed all 'government The Summer Issue: Redefining the Beach Read Since 1953 by Sadie Stein In Defense of Wanderlust by Miranda Popkey TPR v. The New Yorker: Lucky and Good by Cody Wiewandt Dyson Airwrap vs. Shark FlexStyle: Which is worth your money Around Bloom in a Day by Jonathan Gharraie
2.6673s , 8224 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Han Yi-seul-I (한이슬) Archives】,Fresh Information Network