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

Microsoft’s latest HoloLens trailer looks ripped from a sci-fi blockbuster

Add as a preferred source on Google

Openness has become a core focus of Microsoft. The company proved that at Computex 2016 by opening up two of its most significant priority platforms – HoloLens and Windows Hello.

HoloLens, which is no doubt the headliner between the two, is not just a headset. It’s also an API – called Windows Holographic — built by Microsoft to let developers code programs from the HoloLens itself. The company’s announcement that it’s opening Windows Holographic to partners means that they, too, will be able to build devices for its API platform. Anything that’s developed using that API should work as well on partner devices as on the HoloLens itself.

Microsoft HoloLens
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Microsoft demonstrated this with a video. It depicted a designer using holographic to decorate an empty warehouse. After some trouble, she calls her colleagues to help – one of whom is using an HTC Vive. Despite the different hardware, the Vive owner is able to work alongside her colleagues without issue.

Recommended Videos

HTC isn’t the only partner. Microsoft has also announced it’s working with Intel, AMD, Qualcomm, HTC, Acer, Asus, CyberPowerPC, Dell, Falcon Northwest, HP, iBuyPower, Lenovo, MSI, and “many others.” Microsoft is now calling Windows “the only mixed reality platform.”

It’s worth remembering this is still all hypothetical. Very hypothetical. The video includes not only HoloLens and Vive owners working together but also a cute AI companion, real-time translation (presented in AR as a speech bubble), and customizable user avatars. None of which exists – yet.

Everyone say hello, to Windows Hello

Windows Holographic isn’t the only API opening up. Microsoft is also loosening its grip on Windows Hello. While it may not be as cool as Holographic, it’s more likely to have an impact on how you use your PC in the near future.

Hello is Microsoft’s authentication API. It can be used to log in to a device in a variety of ways – usually, through biometrics like a fingerprint or facial scan. But it also can be used to unlock one device with another, and that capability is going to be opened to third parties that want to tap into the API.

 

Put simply, that means you’ll be able to log in automatically when you approach your PC with a wearable. The Nymi Band was used as the example, but in theory it could be almost anything. Fitness bands, smart clothing, even a smartphone.

Aside from these two items, Microsoft repeated earlier announcements from BUILD 2016 at this year’s Computex. The company reminded everyone that the Windows 10 Anniversary update will land soon, that it will include Windows Ink for better stylus input, and that Windows is now installed on over 300 million devices worldwide.

Matthew S. Smith
Matthew S. Smith is the former Lead Editor, Reviews at Digital Trends. He previously guided the Products Team, which dives…
This new Mac malware won’t let you use your computer until you surrender your password
This Mac malware turns your own computer against you
AI Generated Image

A newly discovered strain of macOS malware is taking social engineering to an unsettling new level. Instead of exploiting a software vulnerability or silently stealing information in the background, it simply refuses to let you use your Mac until you type in your login password.

Dubbed ClickLock, the malware repeatedly shuts down key macOS processes, disables notifications, displays convincing Apple password prompts, and effectively traps users in a loop that only ends when the correct password is entered. Once that happens, it doesn't just steal the password. It goes after browser data, cryptocurrency wallets, saved credentials, password managers, and much more.

Read more
1Password lets Claude inside your accounts without handing over the keys
Claude can now sign in on your behalf while your password stays hidden, though trusting it after login is a separate decision
1Password official

1Password is giving Claude a way into your online accounts without making your passwords part of the bargain. The new 1Password for Claude integration can fill login details while keeping the credentials hidden from Anthropic’s AI agent.

Available now on Mac, the feature kicks in when Claude reaches a sign-in page during a task. Claude requests a saved login, then you approve or deny it. If approved, 1Password submits the credentials through a separate encrypted channel. Passwords and one-time codes never enter Claude’s context or Anthropic’s systems.

Read more
New open-weight AI from China is toppling the best of OpenAI and Claude Fable
Moonshot’s 2.8-trillion-parameter Kimi K3 beats Fable 5 and GPT 5.6 Sol in select benchmarks
Art, Drawing, Plant

China's Moonshot AI has launched Kimi K3, a massive 2.8-trillion-parameter model built for coding, research, reasoning, and visual tasks. Moonshot admits K3 still trails Claude Fable 5 and GPT 5.6 Sol overall. Even so, its benchmark results put it surprisingly close to both, and it finishes ahead in several tests.

How close is Kimi K3 to the best closed models?

Read more