Source: www.designnews.com
While we humans bound for Earth may have to rely on virtual reality or augmented reality to experience simulated life in orbit, astronauts aboard the International Space Station are employing AR and VR to get their jobs done. zero gravity more effectively.
One of its key tools is Microsoft HoloLens. Microsoft describes this as a self-contained holographic computer running Windows 10 with no wired connections to any other devices.
HoloLens is built on a Qualcomm Snapdragon 850 computing platform with Microsoft’s second-generation custom holographic processing unit with 4GB of RAM and 64GB of storage. It has WiFi and Bluetooth wireless connections and a USB-C plug.
It has a 2K holographic display and the user is tracked with four visible light head position tracking cameras and two infrared eye position cameras. Its battery lasts two to three hours of use, and the device fits over a pair of regular glasses.
The company cites the manufacturing, architecture, construction, automotive and healthcare industries as its main focus for HoloLens applications, but astronauts are also using it aboard the station for a variety of tasks and experiments.
NASA has identified nine different ways that astronauts use AR/VR in their work, and that doesn’t even include the Space Invaders AR game shown in this video.
For the rest, click on our slideshow to learn about the various NASA experiments using this technology.
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