Hololens

Microsoft contest for HoloLens app ideas

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Microsoft's HoloLens (Image: Microsoft/YouTube)

2 December 2015

Microsoft wants you to help build the next HoloLens app. In a contest just launched, Redmond wants the best idea for the augmented-reality device which it will turn into an app.

Microsoft is not asking for the community to actually develop the app, or even contribute code. Instead, a new Microsoft site asks users to contribute an idea before 11 January 2016. The winner will basically receive a front-row seat to the app’s development, contributing to “weekly build reviews, Q&A sessions, and more,” according to the post, and the winning idea will be developed by Microsoft’s designers, artists, and engineers.

So far, Microsoft has said that all apps coded for the HoloLens will be “universal” apps capable of running on Windows 10 phones, tablets, and PCs, and that “all Universal Windows apps can be made to run on Microsoft HoloLens.” The HoloLens uses a special set of Windows Holographic APIs that track inputs like the user’s gaze, something its other hardware platforms cannot do.

Microsoft wowed tech enthusiasts with early public demos and hands-on experiences with HoloLens. Now it needs to stay ahead of the chicken-and-egg problem: keep its fan base asking for the HoloLens, which in turn will spur app development. Microsoft does not want another Windows Phone struggle on its hands.

In May, we saw what appears to be the “final” version of the HoloLens hardware: a detached, mobile headset that casts a holographic representation over a small portion of your field of view. The device Microsoft plans to ship in 2016 will be for developers only.

Microsoft’s ideas page right now looks very similar to its “UserVoice” feedback sites, where users can suggest improvements for most Microsoft products, from Microsoft Windows to Office to the Xbox. As of press time, the very limited feedback has coalesced around ideas like an an augmented piano tutor, a “real-world” Cortana avatar, and a way of viewing and manipulating 3D charts and graphs in virtual space. Is a Minority Report-style virtual workspace next?

 

Mark Hachman, IDG News Service

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