I’ve seen you say this before, never got what you meant and still don’t.
Abbreviation next to the keyword is equally as important as the keyword itself, you can have ‘games’ as a keyword, but if it’s got a meaningless abbreviation next to it:- ie LR, it’s worthless.
As for XR, i still think it’s bad for the industry and so do many people who are involved within the VR/AR industry, certainly more people are becoming more vocal against it on social media. I still don’t think much as changed with it in the last 8 months (start of the year) and still see XR a social media term more than anything, little is posted in the news, it’s just something people go #XR #VR#AR
#IoT #Tech after tweets and i don’t see any indication that is changing.
Sure there are some companies/start-ups branding around XR, but for every new XR company there are 50 more VR companies branding around VR or AR.
Quote from the guy who purchased ‘coins’ and why they opted for ‘coins’ over ‘crypto’
===
“Furthermore, we also see the word crypto being synonymous with secrets and is also a highly technical term, that may or may not stand the test of time. The terminology in this new world of digital currency evolves so fast. On the other hand, Coins doesn't suffer from that same inherent risk in the long term.”
===
https://www.namepros.com/blog/insid...7-figures-on-coins-com.1091050/#post-6819836’
I think that's a fantastic bit of insight from someone who isn't a domain investor, Ie:- someone heavily bias, registers a few $8.99 domains and then dreams that they are going to get rich, but from an actual end-user, investing in a term/keyword for their company, that doesn't confuse the public and stands the test of time.
End of the day many ‘newer’ terms still has question marks over them, 95% of the world doesn’t even know what XR is, but 95% of the world knows what VR is, so ‘VR’ as a term and what it represents isn’t going vanish as you may think since you said.