Microsoft is taking another turn at testing its HoloLens-based combat goggles with the US military. The company has confirmed to Engadget that it's delivering improved IVAS (Integrated Visual ...
(NEW YORK) — The Army has awarded Microsoft a contract that could be worth almost $22 billion for its futuristic goggles that give soldiers a new way to see the battlefield. Known as IVAS, the acronym ...
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. Microsoft’s latest HoloLens-like goggle prototypes aren’t causing nausea to soldiers testing them, earning the ...
Microsoft’s storied HoloLens project has earned another chapter. Following delays, multiple technical disappointments, and the temptation to ditch the HoloLens project entirely, the company will ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Palmer Luckey's Anduril is set to take over Microsoft's US Army contract for mixed-reality goggles. The 10-year contract, worth ...
Microsoft’s first attempt at creating the HoloLens-based IVAS (Integrated Visual Augmentation System) goggles for the Army was disappointing, as many soldiers experienced nausea and other issues. Now, ...
The IVAS system allows soldiers to see and share data with one another, as well as see outside vehicles, in real time. The system, based on Microsoft’s Hololens, is years late and over budget. The ...
In a nutshell: The HoloLens-based goggles that Microsoft is selling to the US Army have had a long and difficult history. While the hardware and software issues of the early models appear to have been ...
Nearly four years and $22 billion dollars into Microsoft’s development of HoloLens devices for the US military, an Army tester is warning that actually using the augmented reality (AR) goggles could ...