As Covid outbreaks continue to impact aged care homes across the country, using robots to help keep isolated residents company could be an attractive...
Intuition Robotics, the company empowering older adults to live more engaged lives at home, today announced that The Honorable Lance Robertson, former US Department...
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New York State, home to nearly 4.3 million older adults, is planning a new initiative: providing its elderly population with “companion robots.” As reported...
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The astute TechCrunch reader will quickly note that we’ve been covering Intuition Robotics for five years now, dating back to the eldercare robotics’ crowdfunding campaign way back in February 2017. Most of the coverage since then has found the Israeli company raising even more money across various rounds, without actually answering the most important question: […]
Microsoft is deleting AltspaceVR's public hubs such as the campfire, muting new events attendees, and enabling the safety bubble by default. The company says the changes make the platform a "safer space".
Microsoft has reportedly scrapped its third-generation HoloLens, leaving the company's “metaverse” plans in disarray.
According to a report from Business Insider, Microsoft killed off the HoloLens 3 in 2021, shifting to a planned device with Samsung instead. The problem? According to the publication, the company's mixed-reality/augmented reality/virtual-reality division isn't sure what it plans to do. That's resulted in employees leaving for Meta and other companies instead.
The company told BI that it remains committed to HoloLens and future HoloLens development. It said the same to PCWorld in a statement. “Microsoft HoloLens remains a critical part of our plans for emerging categories like mixed reality and the metaverse,” the company said. “We remain committed to HoloLens and future HoloLens development.”
The article details all sorts of internal strife, with employees dishing on what Microsoft executives have said about the mixed-reality device in various private discussions. If there's any conclusion to be reached from BI‘s reporting, it's that Microsoft wants to design the software platforms that the metaverse will run upon, rather than committing to the device itself. Microsoft said last year that that was Microsoft Mesh, a platform we were skeptical of at the time it was announced. By November, Microsoft's mixed-reality plans had seemingly been scaled back to Teams avatars.
As anyone who bought a Kin, Windows Phone, original HoloLens, a Cortana-powered smart speaker, a Windows Mixed Reality Headset, or Microsoft Kinect knows, Microsoft's track record in developing consumer hardware is…well, fraught with failure. Weirdly, after PCWorld was the first publication to go freely hands-on with the HoloLens (after the original, magical introduction), our HoloLens retro review was clear—it was surprisingly fun.
As for now—what's the future of the HoloLens? Who knows.
Updated at 5:09 PM with additional comments from Microsoft.