Microsoft inventor Alex Kipman was joined by holograms at a renowned TED
gathering here on Thursday as he gave a glimpse into a future where
computer screens are relics.
Kipman slipped on HoloLens
augmented-reality (AR) headgear that his team is readying for market and
became a wizard of sorts, calling forth magical landscapes, cold-hard
data, and even summoning the hologram of a Nasa scientist for a chat.
Kipman
spoke of HoloLens and other augmented-reality devices as a step in an
evolution to a time when pecking at smartphone screens or computer
keyboards are tales from generations past.
"I am talking about
freeing ourselves from the two-dimensional confines of traditional
computing," said Kipman, the creator behind Kinect motion-tracking
accessories for Xbox video game consoles.
"We are like cave people
in computer terms; we barely discovered charcoal and started drawing
the first stick figures in our cave."
Walking on the moon
He
touted the HoloLens headset he wore as the first fully-untethered
holographic computer; not relying on a connection to a smartphone or
computer.
A camera showed the TED audience what Kipman saw through
HoloLens as he used gestures to turn the space around him into a cave, a
fantasy land and even the surface of the moon.
He made a virtual
television screen appear in the air, demonstrating how augmented-reality
gear could eliminate the need for real TV sets.
"Computers give us superpowers," Kipman said as he transformed the world around him with holograms.
"In digital space, we have the power to displace space and time."
With another gesture, he launched a video phone call to his family in the US.
"I believe our children's children will grow up in a world devoid of two-dimensional technology," Kipman said.
"I can see holographical telepresence in our future."
To
prove his point, Kipman had Jeff Norris of Nasa's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory appear on stage in the form of a hologram seen through
HoloLens.
HoloLens is already being used on the International Space Station and by Nasa scientists, according to Norris.
"For decadesm, we have explored from a seat, behind screens and keyboards," Norris said.
"Now,
we are leaping over all of that... the antennae, the satellites and the
vast space between worlds to step on the landscape as though we were
really there."
Microsoft has made HoloLens kits available to
developers for $3,000 a piece but has remained mum regarding when
versions of the AR visors will be sold to consumers or at what price.
The
plan is to have a rich array of applications, games and other AR
experiences available before HoloLens hits the market, Kipman told AFP.
"You only get one chance to make a first impression," he said.
When
Microsoft unveiled the HoloLens slightly more than a year ago, chief
executive Satya Nadella billed it as a "mind-blowing" experience that
will open a new type of computing.
A budding 'revolution'
Silicon
Valley-based AR startup Meta let people at TED experience AR for
themselves, with demonstrations that proved so popular the schedule was
packed throughout the five-day gathering.
"I think Iron Man would be proud," Meta chief executive Meron Gribetz said while showing off the technology at TED this week.
Meron
was referring to 'Iron Man' films in which the action hero creates
wonders in his laboratory with the help of holographic computing that
lets him manipulate virtual objects floating in the air.
"Being hunched over phones or computers is the wrong way," Gribetz said.
"In
the next few years, humanity is going to go through a shift. We are
going to start putting a layer of information over the world."
He predicted that within about five years, AR headgear would be slimmed down to mere strips of glass over people's eyes.
Meta
did not disclose pricing or availability of its AR headsets, which plug
into computers, but a countdown clock at the startup's website on
Thursday indicated that "the revolution begins" in less than two weeks.