Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

Trimble's SketchUp Viewer lets you use Hololens so you can live inside designs

Add as a preferred source on Google

It’s hard to beat SketchUp when it comes to simple 3D design and layout tools. It’s easy to learn, with an intuitive and friendly interface, and there is even a free version if you just want to try it out. Now, Trimble is upping the ante with SketchUp Viewer for Microsoft’s Hololens, so you can explore your designs and worlds in a new way.

For now, it is just a viewer application, instead of a full-fledged version of the SketchUp application. The objects can appear as holograms in the real world, making it easier to consider the implications of design choices. In particular, it is an excellent tool for remodeling and recreating spaces or working to revamp an existing structure.

Recommended Videos

The first version of SketchUp Viewer for Microsoft Hololens has two different modes. The first is a tabletop mode, which uses a smaller area to display models as if they were a physical model. Models can be resized to fit the area and anchored in place so that other users can walk around them and see different angles.

Immersive mode is the second, and flashier, display mode. As you might imagine, immersive mode takes those digital objects and overlays them on existing physical structures. Hololens’ untethered nature means you can freely explore those augmented reality scenes you created.

As augmented reality solutions like the Hololens become more prevalent, this type of experience is exactly the useful and intuitive type of implementation that will drive more excitement and adoption.

There is more good news. If you already have, or are thinking of buying, a Hololens developer kit, the SketchUp Viewer for Microsoft Hololens is available now from the Windows Store. Trimble has also released a special extension for the SketchUp application that allows users to export their designs into an AR/VR experience for the Hololens.

Brad Bourque
Brad Bourque is a native Portlander, devout nerd, and craft beer enthusiast. He studied creative writing at Willamette…
Gemini Spark hits Mac, and it might just become your new favorite assistant
From messy downloads to date night reservations, Spark is here to lighten your load.
Gemini Spark mac app

Google has just announced a big batch of updates for Gemini Spark, making the assistant far more useful than before. Gemini Spark is finally coming to the Mac desktop app, bringing deeper app connections and a new way to keep tabs on what you care about. Let us break it down.

What can Spark do on your Mac now?

Read more
You’ll be able to use Claude Fable 5 again starting July 1
Anthropic has received a green light from the US government to restore the AI Model, weeks after a security researcher found a way around its safeguards that triggered the shutdown.
Laptop running Claude Fable

Anthropic is restoring full access to Claude Fable 5 starting tomorrow, weeks after a US government directive forced the company to suspend the model for all users. The government order arrived on June 12 and required Anthropic to block foreign nationals from using Fable 5 and its more capable Mythos 5 model. Since the rule took effect immediately and Anthropic had no way to verify a user's nationality in real time, the company suspended both models entirely rather than risk a violation.

What triggered the shutdown

Read more
Claude’s Sonnet 5 is built to do more on its own and cost you less
Better than its predecessor, nearly as good as the flagship, and meaningfully cheaper than both.
Art, Floral Design, Graphics

Every major AI lab is racing to prove its models can work autonomously with minimal hand-holding; we’re now seeing pricing emerge as the next battleground. 

Anthropic just fired its latest shot, Claude Sonnet 5, a model the company says performs nearly as well as its flagship Opus 4.8 at a fraction of the cost.

Read more