Microsoft HoloLens : How It Works and How it's Different




What's a HoloLens, and How does it work

 Microsoft's HoloLens is not actually producing 3D images that every can see; this is not "Star Trek".

Instead of everyone walking into a room made to reproduce 3D images, Microsoft's goggles show images only the wearer can see. Everyone else will just think you're wearing goofy-looking glasses.
Another key thing about HoloLens as both a personal and a workplace device.

Microsoft the company is not trying to transport you to a different world. but rather bring the wonders of a computer directly to the one you're living in. Microsoft is overlaying images and objects onto our living rooms.

As a HoloLens wearer, you will still see the real world in front of you. you can walk around and talk to others without worrying about bumping into walls.

The goggles will track your movements, watch your gaze and transform what you see by blasting light at your eyes ( it does not hurt). Because the device tracks where you are, you can use hand gestures- right now it's only a midair click by raising and lowering your finger- to interact with the 3D images.

There's a whole bunch of other hardware that's designed to help the HoloLens effects feel believable. The device has a plethora of sensors to sense your movements in a room and it uses this information along with layers of colored glass to create images you can interact with or investigate from different angles. want to see the back of a virtual bike in the middle of your kitchen? Just walk to the other side of it.


The goggles also have a camera that looks at the room, so the HoloLens knows where tables, chairs, and other objects are. it then uses that information to project 3d images on top of and even inside the,- place virtual dynamite on your desk and you might blow a hole to see what's indise

Release Date:It was releasing in the First Quarter of 2016


1 comments:

Unknown said...

Good information :) Hope to see more :D