Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Windows Mixed Reality" in Vietnamese language version.
A hologram is an object like any other object in the real world, with only one difference: instead of being made of physical matter, a hologram is made entirely of light. [...] Microsoft HoloLens generates a multi-dimensional image visible to the user so that he or she perceives holographic objects in the physical world.
HoloLens is the first—and so far—only holographic computer out there. [...] I hope that in the not-so-distant future there will be many such devices. [...] This is running Windows 10. All of the APIs for human and environment understanding are part of Windows, and this version of Windows that we put on this device—we call it Windows Holographic.
The Microsoft HoloLens is not what I think of when I hear the word “hologram.” What Microsoft calls holograms, most of us have been calling augmented reality for years—overlaying digital images over our view of the real world.
The way to think about it will be a launch wave that starts in the summer with PCs, and fills out over time as more devices come online [...] You should expect [the] phone, HoloLens, Xbox, and Surface Hub [launches] will be staggered
There are arguments about whether HoloLens really does create holograms, or if Microsoft has usurped the term when in fact the digital phantoms are something else entirely. Personally, [...] I think augmented reality is at a stage where it needs all the help it can get to communicate its value to potential users.
The pair of Microsoft reps in the IPD room also explained to us the three ways we were going to interact with HoloLens: "gaze," wherein you move a cursor by looking around; "gesture," where you air tap to select an item; and "voice," which is...obvious. "We call it 'GGV'," said one of the reps.
Each lens has three layers of glass—in blue, green, and red—full of microthin corrugated grooves that diffract light. [...] A “light engine” above the lenses projects light into the glasses, where it hits the grating and then volleys between the layers of glass millions of times.