Short Bytes: Microsoft has finally started to accept pre-orders for HoloLens at $3,000. To explain how thinks actually work at ground level, the company has released a cartoon video on YouTube.
About one year
ago, Microsoft introduced HoloLens to the world as the first and only
fully untethered holographic computer. Yesterday, the company announced
that it is now taking pre-orders for the HoloLens Development Edition.
This augmented reality headset costs about $3,000 and comes with a Bluetooth 4.1 Clicker that allows a user to interact with an object and trigger commands. Powered by a 32-bit Intel SoC with a customized Microsoft Holographic Processing Unit (HPU), the hardware comes with 2GB RAM and 64GB of inbuilt storage.
To know more, take a look at the video below:
If you wish lo learn more about HoloLens and its the hardware, watch video below:
Did you find these videos interesting? Share your views in the comments below.
This augmented reality headset costs about $3,000 and comes with a Bluetooth 4.1 Clicker that allows a user to interact with an object and trigger commands. Powered by a 32-bit Intel SoC with a customized Microsoft Holographic Processing Unit (HPU), the hardware comes with 2GB RAM and 64GB of inbuilt storage.
What is the science behind the holograms and how it’s implemented in HoloLens?
In an animation video released by the company, a narrator explains how HoloLens renders holograms (or stereoscopic 3D images). The video explains why your eyes feel strained while HoloLens eradicates this problem. Our eyes respond according to the distance of the object and focus on objects differently.To know more, take a look at the video below:
If you wish lo learn more about HoloLens and its the hardware, watch video below:
Did you find these videos interesting? Share your views in the comments below.
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