There are virtual services (.vsrv) in the virtual user environment (VUE) are three-dimensional graphical elements that have software services associated with them, in the Operating Spaces® virtual systems. These virtual services (.vsrv) display around a user of the Operating Spaces® virtual systems, connected to other elements that are virtual objects (.vobj), using wireless brain-to-computer interface (WBCI) technologies, to interact with the virtual computer systems with your brain, alone, without the need to use a keyboard or a mouse, anymore.
An example of a virtual service (.vsrv) is the thought-to-text (TTT) services, that allow detection of thoughts from a human brain, and conversion of the thoughts into text files. Another example of a virtual service (.vsrv) would be a thought-controlled service (TCS), such as a service that would allow the control of a virtual operating systems, such as Operating Spaces®, through thoughts, alone.
All virtual services (.vsrv) are contained within a Virtual Services Control Panel, within the frontend or backend of Operating Spaces®. The frontend control panel for virtual services allows for configuration by the user, while the backend control panel for virtual services allows for configuration only by a system administrator. For each virtual service (.vsrv), there is a .vsrv file that links into the applicable control panel, and each virtual service has its own configuration dialogue window, that every virtual service configuration dialogue window is a standard schema of display style, however each configuration dialogue window is unique to the specific virtual service.
Each configuration dialogue window for each virtual service opens from the .vsrv file, or also from the applicable control panel. Each virtual service can be configured to be hidden, or immutable, or background, or foreground. Each virtual service that pertains to the frontend control panel can be configured for each user on a system, while each virtual service that pertains to the backend control panel pertains to the system itself.
















