Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. Virtual Reality
  4. News

Microsoft ‘holoportation’ lets you share a room with a faraway friend

Add as a preferred source on Google

Whether you need to inform Obi-Wan he’s your only hope, or just want to hang out with loved ones who are far, far away, who hasn’t dreamed of a future involving holograms? Microsoft’s “holoportation” demo shows that it’s possible — if you’ve got a couple of HoloLenses and a couple of rooms surrounded by 3D cameras anyway.

Shahram Izadi, principle research manager at Microsoft Research (Cambridge UK), hangs out with a co-worker in hologram form in a recently released video, and then with his daughter.

Recommended Videos

It’s not a perfect re-creation: you can tell that you’re looking at a hologram because of occasional glitches and an overall low polygon count. But it’s not hard to imagine this being more intimate than a Skype chat.

“Imagine being able to teleport to any place, with anyone, at any time,” said Izadi in the video. “That’s what holoportation is all about.”

The setup isn’t simple. A HoloLens is required to see the holograms in realtime, and a room surrounded by 3D cameras is necessary to create them. And however good the technology becomes, there’s one barrier to this feeling deeply immersive: the HoloLens itself.

You can’t see other people using this tech unless you’re wearing a HoloLens, and you can’t make eye contact with people who are wearing the augmented reality device. To see another person’s holographic face, they need to take off their headset — which means they can’t see you.

In the video Izadi Interacts with his daughter Lilly, who is not wearing a HoloLens. His daughter cannot see him, and at one point almost walks straight through him because of this.

So there’s a design problem here that headsets can’t readily solve. But it’s still a remarkable example of what sort of tech we’ll have access to in the future, and it’s particularly cool to see the recorded  conversation played back, and even shrunk.

“It’s almost like walking into a living memory, that I can see from another perspective,” said Izadi.

We’re excited to see how this all develops, and will do all we can to keep you informed.

Justin Pot
Justin's always had a passion for trying out new software, asking questions, and explaining things – tech journalism is the…
Amazon thinks you love AI, so it has launched a special storefront for AI-powered gadgets
Google AI mode mockup showing new feature

You're browsing for a new laptop — one has a better processor, another has more RAM, a third says "AI-powered" in bold letters, and you're not entirely sure what that means. But Amazon has noticed you pausing on that third one, and it has thoughts. The company just launched an AI Store on Amazon.in — a dedicated storefront that rounds up AI-enabled gadgets across categories, from smartphones and laptops to refrigerators and washing machines. So, instead of you wading through spec sheets trying to figure out which "AI feature" actually does something useful, the store spells it out for you.

What the AI store actually is

Read more
Gemini now makes personalized images by understanding your taste from Photos library
Logo, Disk, Symbol

Up until now, using Google Gemini meant being very specific. If you wanted an image, you’d spell it all out, the mood, the lighting, the tiny details, just to get something close to what you had in mind. That’s still how most AI tools operate. But this is where things start to shift. With the integration of Nano Banana 2 and Google Photos, Gemini feels much more familiar. It leans on your preferences, what you like, what you usually capture, and the kind of visuals you gravitate towards, and uses that context to shape what it creates for you.

So instead of over-explaining every prompt, you’re nudging it in a direction, and it fills in the rest in a way that feels personal. The goal here is simple: spend less time describing and more time seeing your ideas come to life, almost the way you imagined them, without having to say everything out loud.

Read more
This AI lets self-driving cars “remember” past drives to plan safer routes
A memory of the past could make self-driving cars safer on the road
Self driving car from Waymo

One of the biggest problems with self-driving systems is that they can see the road perfectly well and still make shaky short-term decisions in messy city traffic. The advanced systems struggle to keep up with complex and fluctuating road situations. But a new study argues that these cars don't need better vision, but a better memory.

In the peer-reviewed paper KEPT (Knowledge-Enhanced Prediction of Trajectories from Consecutive Driving Frames with Vision-Language Models), researchers from Tongji University and collaborators developed a system that helps autonomous vehicles "remember" past driving scenes before choosing what to do next.

Read more