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Pano2VR is one of the most popular software used by professionals to create custom self-hosted virtual tours for Fortune 100 companies such as Toyota and other clients. Virtual Reality Pulse is a collection of the leading industry thought leadership in the form of blogs, webinars, and downloadable resources, on one convenient website.
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You can learn how to use Pano2VR in a free webinar tutorial series starting this Wednesday June 3 at 8am Pacific Time. Update: the replay of the webinar is below. We use reader data to auto-curate the articles, meaning that the most valuable resources move to the top. Shawn Agyeman, left, laughs as Mashaun Alston, center, and Patric McCoy express their thoughts on parts of a book during the Visible Man Review book club meeting in Chicago on Aug. Otis Woods, a 30-year-old policy fellow with the Leadership for Educational Equity, said VMR has read books that help him think about identity, masculinity, relationships with Black women, relationships with white society, understanding our community, fatherhood and brotherhood. As someone who likes to pick people’s brains, Woods said he sought out the book club. “I’m really thirsty for learning,” said Woods, of West Englewood. “I enjoy listening to older Black men and their experiences and how they perceive the world.”Įducational consultant Stephen McClain, 38, said the Visible Man Review has createda sacred space for Black men - where they are able to talk about fatherhood, relationships, work, race, current events and process it all with different perspectives. McClain said the club offers a sense of belonging. “More than anything, I see this as a space of healing,” said the Hyde Park resident. “We’ve read some books that have really allowed us to discuss the Black male experience, which is traumatic. But it’s also given birth to discussions around how can we heal? “The other piece of this that I think is really important is our focus on Black businesses. Every month when we meet, we meet at a Black business. We are buying something, we are listening to the owner talk about their mission, whatever it is. All of those things are really important beyond the literature, and for Black culture.” We’ve had Black sommeliers come and expose us to Black wine. North Kenwood resident and activist art collector Patric McCoy, 75, has raved about VMR so much, he’s gotten other people to join. He said the fact that the book club is for Black men is important. McCoy, co-founder of the nonprofit arts organization Diasporal Rhythms, said it was while reading “Three Girls From Bronzeville” when the conversation went in directions he’d never have thought about.

“Because so many of the guys in the group have daughters, they started talking about the concept of men fathering daughters, issues that I have never heard Black men talk about,” he said.
