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posted by janrinok on Thursday January 22 2015, @03:15PM   Printer-friendly
from the more-likely-than-flying-cars dept.

TheLink writes:

A story from CNet has previews of Microsoft's Hololens - an augmented reality product::

REDMOND, Wash. -- In the bowels of Building 92, hidden underneath the company's public visitor center in a secret series of labs, Microsoft let a few people try out what may be the most ambitious Windows device ever made: a holographic headset that aims to rival the most advanced virtual reality devices out there.

Microsoft's HoloLens is expected to run Windows 10 and apps -- holographic ones that will float in front of your line of vision and apps that can be run on phones, tablets, PCs and the Xbox One game console. With the holographic programs, Microsoft is trying to transform how we think about computing, productivity and communication. Just as VR rivals Oculus (owned by Facebook) and Google are trying to reimagine virtual experiences with their head-worn devices, Microsoft wants us to imagine a world without screens, where information merely floats in front of you.

"We're not talking about putting you into virtual worlds," HoloLens leader Alex Kipman said Wednesday during an event at Microsoft's headquarters here. "We're dreaming beyond virtual worlds, beyond screens, beyond pixels."

http://www.theverge.com/2015/1/21/7868251/microsoft-hololens-hologram-hands-on-experience
http://www.wired.com/2015/01/microsoft-hands-on/

 
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  • (Score: 2) by novak on Friday January 23 2015, @09:23AM

    by novak (4683) on Friday January 23 2015, @09:23AM (#137187) Homepage

    The first thing I thought was "This looks cool." Before I worried about resolution, aspect ratio, effective PPI, or anything else. The next was "I bet it only runs on windows." And if it does, I'll never use it. More importantly, unlike in the 90s where MS could do whatever they want, a lot of people won't use it as phones are their major computing devices. It would be almost funny to see MS twisting to try to get people to buy back into their ecosystem to be screwed, without having a single thing to offer besides "shiny."

    Realistically, there are other VR and AR projects out there, years ahead of this one. I'm curious if they have any secret strategies or killer apps, or if they just plan to be years late to the party, as usual.

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    novak
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