Here's how one of DORA's creators, Emre Tanirgan, describes the experience:

You feel like you are transported somewhere else in the real world as opposed to a simulated environment. You actually get to see people interacting with you, as if you were actually there, and it's difficult to recreate the same experience in a virtual environment right now.

Done right, the setup can make you feel like you're really in the meeting room, the office or wherever the telepresence robot is. However, perfecting the system hasn't been easy for the roboticists, who are still trying to reduce the lag time between the user's movements and what's shown on screen. The current lag time is around 70 milliseconds, and shifting to WiFi or 4G from using radio link for the wireless data transfer could increase it even more. That's why the team's aiming to bring it down below 60 ms, since too much lag could lead to motion sickness.

Once DORA's ready for deployment, the team will first make it available to museums offering virtual tours and emergency responders. After them, ordinary consumers could come next, though that obviously wouldn't happen anytime soon.