Microsoft’s Windows 10
launch event saw the launch of Windows HoloLens and the HoloLens headset, which
are some of the most intriguing products the company has unveiled in the recent
past.
The Windows HoloLens is
similar to an augmented reality experience (the kind many apps on smartphones
aim to give) except that this is much more advanced, because users can wear a
headset, like Virtual Reality goggles, to experience holograms in real
life.
According to the
company, HoloLens brings high-definition holograms in your world, where they
integrate with your physical places, spaces, and things. Microsoft says these
holograms will transform your digital content (a say a picture or a graph or a
game you’ve been playing) into real, physical objects in the room
which you can physically interact with. For instance, you would be able to
actually play Minecraft as though the game existed in the real world and
not just the digital world.
In fact, Microsoft has
also found the first adopters for the HoloLens: Scientists at NASA, who the
company says will use HoloLens to explore Mars using images captured by
the Mars Curiosity Rover. According to the company, “they will work as if
they can walk on the surface of Mars, an experience previously impossible.”
To enable the
experience, Microsoft also showcased its first hardware around this, which is
the HoloLens headset.
So what are the specs
and features of the HoloLens headset like? Well Microsoft isn’t revealing much.
According to this report on The Verge, this is a prototype device for now and the press weren’t
allowed to take video or cameras when interacting with the headset at the
event.
Microsoft described the HoloLens headset as “the most advanced
holographic computer the world has ever seen.” This is basically “a
self-contained computer, including a CPU, a GPU, and a dedicated holographic
processor”, notes the report. According to Microsoft’s official page on the HoloLens, the headset doesn’t
require cords, wires or phones or tethers, has a transparent lens and advanced
sensors, has built in spatial sounds, and is powered by Windows 10.
There is a see-through
visor to let you see what’s in front of you, there’s spatial sound to hear
holograms behind you and a bunch of other sensors which will work in tandem.
As this Engadget piece notes, based on
the images of the device one can see “at least four cameras or sensors on the
front of the HoloLens prototype.” Microsoft has not given away too many details
on what they can do or what exactly they are capable of.
As for the
“holographic processing unit” , Microsoft explained during the presentation
that it was needed because the set was processing terabytes of data in real
time to understand gestures, voice and map the environment.
Microsoft has also
invited other companies such as Oculus and Motion Leap to come work with them
on Windows Holographics to develop interesting products and create their own
holograms.
There was no official
date announced for the release of the HoloLens headset, but it was said that it
would come out within the Windows 10 timeframe. CEO Satya Nadella, who
arrived towards the end of the event, also stressed on the fact that there
would be both consumer as well as enterprise versions of the HoloLens headset.
Irrespective of when
this comes out, the HoloLens, is definitely one of the most exciting product to
come out of Microsoft in recent times.
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