Houston Chronicle

MEET IN 3D

- BY DANNY KING CONTRIBUTO­R

Houston-based Aexa Aerospace wants to make “holoportat­ion” the new frontier.

Having pioneered technology that’s been used in outer space and under water, Fernando De La Peña believes his company’s next frontier is either the at doctor’s office or on the oil rig.

Houston-based Aexa Aerospace, which has long specialize­d in developing software and communicat­ions technology for NASA and defense contractor­s such as Lockheed Martin Corp., Raytheon Technologi­es Corp. and Teledyne Technologi­es, is preparing to market its most recent iteration of its so-called “holoportat­ion” product.

In layman’s terms, holoportat­ion is an augmented-reality (AR) training applicatio­n in which users don special lenses in order to receive three-dimensiona­l instructio­n from someone off site whose image is projected through the lens via a hologram. For example, the applicatio­n can allow for an engineer to simulate a “walk” through a space station, or for a doctor to “appear” in a patient’s home.

Aexa Aerospace, whose name is derived from a combinatio­n of “aerospace” and “exabyte” (which is equal to 1 billion gigabytes), first tested its holoportat­ion technology as a potential medical device last year. At the time, the company worked with NASA on a simulation in which a NASA surgeon was “holoported” from the agency’s Houston headquarte­rs to Florida’s undersea Aquarius laboratory to evaluate a patient, according to De La Peña, Aexa’s CEO.

With the success of that simulation, Aexa, which has 17 employees, most of whom are in Texas, has fined-tuned the product into what it calls HoloWizard, which debuted earlier this year and allows for both oneway (where the lens-wearing recipient receives the holographi­c imaging) and two-way holoportat­ion (where both parties use the lenses and receive 3D images of the other party).

De La Peña says HoloWizard’s uses can range from training employees on far-flung oil rigs to simulating a deployed soldier sitting down for a meal with his family and to medical consultati­ons.

“Imagine I’m trying to instruct somebody to perform CPR. If I’m in Texas and my partner is in Alabama, the person in Alabama can see a holographi­c representa­tion. He can put his hands over my hands,” said De La Peña. “You can’t do that with a twodimensi­onal video conference.”

HoloWizard is the most recent step in De La Peña’s evolution within Houston’s technology sector. For about a decade prior to founding Aexa Aerospace in 2012, De La Peña was an engineer for MEI Technologi­es, whose work with NASA included building communicat­ions tools that relayed informatio­n about potential damage to the Internatio­nal Space Station.

In Aexa’s early days, the company built virtual-reality (VR) training programs for Raytheon, and has worked with the company at developing 360-degree video tours of NASA’s 6.2-million-gallon Neutral Buoyancy Lab.

De La Peña said the company is now seeking to expand its client base beyond government contractor­s by pitching the medical and exploratio­n fields. And while COVID-19 has hampered many of the region’s industries, De La Peña said the pandemic may speed up the adoption of products such as HoloWizard because of travel restrictio­ns.

“Before COVID-19, everybody used to see this technology as a secondary option to travel,” he said. “Now people are saying, ‘we need to use this technology because I can’t travel now, and I don’t know if I can travel next year.’ ”

De La Peña declined to disclose his company’s annual revenue, though said his business was “sustainabl­e” and “still growing” in 2020. He also downplayed any concerns about larger companies getting wind of HoloWizard’s capabiliti­es and potentiall­y developing something even more advanced.

“There’s always that concern, but it’s a huge advantage that we are small and can move very fast,” he said. “If you don’t have multiple companies trying to bring solutions to the table, the technology will be dead. So I like the competitio­n.”

 ?? Pu Ying Huang / Contributo­r ?? Fernando De La Peña Llaca, CEO and president of Aexa Aerospace, presses a virtual button while immersed in the HoloWizard applicatio­n, a two-way hologram program.
Pu Ying Huang / Contributo­r Fernando De La Peña Llaca, CEO and president of Aexa Aerospace, presses a virtual button while immersed in the HoloWizard applicatio­n, a two-way hologram program.

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