Microsoft Holographic Display Patents
Microsoft Near Eye Displays for Augmented Reality.
Microsoft Near Eye Displays
AR Future with Glasses prototype (Microsoft)
Intel Consumer smart Glasses
Retinal Scan Display
Google Like Device you might actually wear
How Intel may succeed where google glass failed
Will lasers save intel's glasses from sucking?
Showing posts with label #retinaDislpay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #retinaDislpay. Show all posts
Saturday, February 10, 2018
List 'o links
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Friday, December 30, 2016
Forget the glasses
Hustled off to visit a friend this morning before I got done reading my alerts.
This one showed up when I resumed reading this afternoon.
A decent summary of what is going on in augmented reality -- and a nice mention of Microvision.
Spectrum.ieee
Also in the AR-heavy category, and already shipping to developers and some business customers, is Microsoft’s $3,000 HoloLens, an AR headset with all its necessary computing performed on board. The trade-off Microsoft made to make this technology portable is in its field of view: At less than 45 degrees, it’s like looking through a small window. One of Microsoft’s competitors, Meta, is taking preorders from developers for a $950 headset with a 90-degree field of view—but the Meta headset requires tethering to an external computer to operate. Both project images outward, not directly on your retina, as Magic Leap is expected to do. But Magic Leap may not end up being the only AR retina display out there. Kartik Hosanagar, professor of technology and digital business at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, says he believes that MicroVision, a pioneer in retina displays, may move into commercial augmented reality.
This one showed up when I resumed reading this afternoon.
A decent summary of what is going on in augmented reality -- and a nice mention of Microvision.
Spectrum.ieee
Also in the AR-heavy category, and already shipping to developers and some business customers, is Microsoft’s $3,000 HoloLens, an AR headset with all its necessary computing performed on board. The trade-off Microsoft made to make this technology portable is in its field of view: At less than 45 degrees, it’s like looking through a small window. One of Microsoft’s competitors, Meta, is taking preorders from developers for a $950 headset with a 90-degree field of view—but the Meta headset requires tethering to an external computer to operate. Both project images outward, not directly on your retina, as Magic Leap is expected to do. But Magic Leap may not end up being the only AR retina display out there. Kartik Hosanagar, professor of technology and digital business at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, says he believes that MicroVision, a pioneer in retina displays, may move into commercial augmented reality.
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