Altspace VR to Shut Down Following Microsoft Layoffs

The Metaverse service will cease operations March 10, 2023

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Altspace VR to Shutdown Following Microsoft Lay Offs
Virtual RealityNews Analysis

Published: January 24, 2023

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Rory Greener

Last Friday, Microsoft-owned immersive social platform Altspace VR (virtual reality) announced the closure of its service effective March 10, 2023. The decision comes following recent lay offs at Microsoft.

Altspace VR initially launched on May 2015 under the supervision of the platform’s then Founder and CEO, Eric Romo – who went on to work as Meta’s Director of Product, Reality Labs Social Experiences until 2022 – and Microsoft acquired the Altspace service following a near closure in 2017.

Microsoft operated Altspace VR under its mixed reality (MR) division alongside the development of Hololens, Azure AI, and Mesh immersive solutions. The entire division faces an uncertain future following Microsoft laying off 11,000 workers this month. The move greatly affected Microsoft’s MR division which lost considerable numbers.

Altspace VR’s closure will see its remaining staff and resources move over to Microsoft’s development of Mesh. In its closing “sunset” statement, Altspace VR noted how they wish to contribute to creating a platform with the “widest opportunity to all involved, including creators, partners and customers.”

Microsoft Lay-Offs

The mass lay-off across Microsoft’s offices has dramatically affected the development of internal extended reality (XR) solutions.

In addition to closing Altspace VR, Microsoft is ceasing development into its mixed reality tool kit (MRTK) software development kit.

MRTK is the base for several enterprise-grade applications, solutions, and tools, including the firm’s Hololens. The device’s future may also be in question because Microsoft is dropping its MRTK support.

Moreover, Microsoft’s Holoens division faced further hurdles this month when the US Army rejected a major immersive technology deal.

The US Army and Microsoft have a well-reported relationship, developing an IVAS MR headset for military training. The US Army’s bespoke device uses the Hololens 2 as its base, and the partnership created various IVAS models. But upcoming variants may become the last as the rejected deal lost Microsoft $400 million.

The lay-offs and subsequent reshuffle mirror Meta’s reshuffle of its Reality Labs division for immersive technology research and development (R&D). The firm recorded $10 billion in profit losses in 2022 from its XR R&D division.

The losses forced Meta to cancel various projects and products while reshuffling and cutting down its workforce. Snap also faced similar hurdles last year, forcing the firm to drop immersive products following poor stock performance.

Despite its current hurdles, Microsoft continues investing in immersive technologies such as Chat GPT. Microsoft and the service’s parent firm Open AI entered an extended partnership this Monday worth billions.

Additionally, Microsoft continues to integrate its 365 and Azure product portfolios into third-party XR hardware, such as a significant deal with Meta to integrate the Office Suite into the Quest lineup.

What is Microsoft Mesh

Despite recent events, a significant internal XR investment Microsoft continues to back is its XR collaboration service Mesh.

Microsoft is developing Mesh as an augmented and virtual reality (AR/VR) service which allows users to interact with real-time 3D (RT3D) visualisations of friends or co-workers.

Users can collaborate via a headset, PC, or smartphone to work in an immersive spatial environment via “Holoportation.”

Microsoft also integrated the service into Teams, allowing users to connect to a call as a tracked avatar. Moreover, Mesh App for Hololens also enables a user to create a custom avatar for use during immersive collaboration.

The enterprise-grade immersive collaboration is in production, with groups such as Accenture and the World Economic Forum adopting and promoting the Mesh platform.

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