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As opposed to real holograms?
Anyway, semantic issues aside, this is something that I am really excited about. About two weeks ago we announced the availability of the Hololens Emulator. This allows you to begin developing holographic applications today – even if you do not have access to a Hololens device. When you get it up and running it looks like this:
Personally – I have been eagerly waiting for this to release for two reasons. The first is that after playing with a Hololens a little while ago – I have been really wanting to do some development for it myself. It really is an amazing device. The second reason is because this is built on top of Hyper-V.
Let me show you:
What you can see here is the Hololens Emulator virtual machine that is running in Hyper-V behind the scenes. If you dig in and look at this virtual machine – you will see that we are utilizing RemoteFX to enable the use of virtual holograms inside the virtual machine:
It is great to see the technology coming together like this. It is also cool that I have virtual machines running Windows 10, Windows Phone and Hololens all on my laptop – ready whenever I need them.
Cheers,
Ben
Comments
- Anonymous
April 11, 2016
Very cool!What would be equally cool is if you could:1. Use RemoteFX with normal RDP from a PC2. Use RemoteFX with normal RDP to cast/mirror your screen to another PC3. Run Windows Holographic apps on tablets that have depth sensors on the backThanks!