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This Environmental Art Exhibit Is Powered By Mixed Reality

VRScout

The experiential art show is powered by the HoloLens 2, Microsoft’s latest mixed reality headset. You can even interact with certain elements using their own two hands via the headset’s built-in hand-tracking technology. Credit: Arcadia Earth. Tickets begin at $33 ($39 peak).

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The best AR and VR news from CES 2022

The Ghost Howls

Of course, the object must be in the FOV of the cameras of the headset to be tracked, even if HTC says that the tracking can somewhat continue also when this condition is not true (i guess using just IMU data). Qualcomm and Microsoft partnership. I think that this tracker can be very useful. Further references. Shiftall MeganeX.

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XR Podcast Hosts Unite, with Voices of VR Podcast’s Kent Bye – Part 1

XR for Business Podcast

Kent: It reminds me of– I have gone to Microsoft Build for the last three years, and that’s a good place to kind of see some of the AR demos that are there in terms of the partners with Microsoft. But I think we can stay on the cartoonish side of things as long as we hope things like eye tracking and hand tracking.

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XR Podcast Hosts Unite, with Voices of VR Podcast's Kent Bye - Part 1

XR for Business Podcast

Kent: It reminds me of-- I have gone to Microsoft Build for the last three years, and that's a good place to kind of see some of the AR demos that are there in terms of the partners with Microsoft. But I think we can stay on the cartoonish side of things as long as we hope things like eye tracking and hand tracking.

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XR Podcast Hosts Unite, with Voices of VR Podcast’s Kent Bye – Part 1

XR for Business Podcast

Kent: It reminds me of– I have gone to Microsoft Build for the last three years, and that’s a good place to kind of see some of the AR demos that are there in terms of the partners with Microsoft. But I think we can stay on the cartoonish side of things as long as we hope things like eye tracking and hand tracking.