Arab Times

Microsoft remains force in future techs

First shipments of HoloLens begins

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SAN FRANCISCO, March 31, (AFP): Microsoft made a pitch Wednesday to developers to stay with the US tech giant, saying it remains a force in future technologi­es such as artificial intelligen­ce and augmented reality.

Chief executive Satya Nadella highlighte­d Microsoft’s advances with its HoloLens augmented reality goggles, its Cortana virtual assistant and its progress in cloud computing.

This means Microsoft is a force to be reckoned with even though it has lagged rivals like Apple and Google in powering mobile devices, according to Nadella.

“For us, mobile first is not about the mobility of any single device, it is the mobility of the human experience across all the devices and all the computing in our lives,” Nadella told the San Francisco gathering.

“Cloud is not a single destinatio­n, cloud is a new form of computing that in fact enables that mobility of experience across all our devices.”

The company said its Windows 10 operating system — which can be tied together a range of devices including PCs, phones and tablets — now has some 270 million users.

“Windows 10 is off to an amazing start,” said Nadella, calling it the “fastest ever” adoption of the Windows operating system.

Installed

The 270 million represents new computers and devices with Windows 10 installed as well as upgrades of existing gadgets.

Microsoft has set a goal of having the operating system in use in more than a billion devices by 2018, which would put it on a par with Apple, which said this year it has one billion active devices running iOS.

Microsoft said it would introduce an update of the operating system in the coming months that will make Windows 10 available for its Xbox One game console and enable various devices to use the Microsoft digital assistant known as Cortana, an artificial intelligen­ce tool.

The Windows update will also step up use of biometrics for authentica­tion, allowing users to log into computers and their applicatio­ns with their fingerprin­ts, improving security by moving away from passwords.

Microsoft also Wednesday began its first shipments of its HoloLens augmented reality headgear, staking its place in what is expected to be an emerging computing platform.

HoloLens is being delivered to applicatio­n developers, with Microsoft opting for augmented reality rather than virtual reality in devices such as the Oculus Rift from Facebook.

While virtual reality is fully immersive, the partly immersive augmented reality allows users to multitask via virtual images superimpos­ed on their normal field of view.

At the conference, the US tech giant showed some of the possibilit­ies for HoloLens — such as giving users a view of Mars that up to now could only be seen by space vehicles, and an inside view of the brain by medical specialist­s aiming to deal with a brain tumor.

Aiming to encourage new applicatio­ns for the device, Microsoft noted that developers can create a “new mixed reality” with holograms to enable users to see and experience things in new ways.

Microsoft unveiled the HoloLens goggles a year ago as rivals such as Oculus were moving into virtual reality.

The holographi­c capabiliti­es in the Microsoft gear can open doors for developers to augment tasks from complex surgery to motorcycle design, according to the company.

The developer editions will be available for $3,000 for app makers and other Microsoft partners.

Move

One of the partners is NASA, which uses HoloLens to help users move about as if they are on Mars and figure out where they want the Rover to go.

Pamela Davis, dean of the Case Western Reserve University medical school, led a demonstrat­ion showing how holographi­c images of the body and its organs, including the brain, can be used in doctor training.

With the goggles and Windows 10, Microsoft said in a statement it was “extending the Windows experience to holograms and allowing developers to begin helping build the future of holographi­c computing.”

The move by Microsoft comes just two days after Oculus began deliveries of the first Rift devices to consumers.

Lilian Rincon, a program manager for Microsoft’s Skype service, demonstrat­ed how this might work. After receiving a video message from her boss that mentioned an upcoming conference in Dublin, Rincon used Cortana to mark the dates on her calendar. Cortana then used Skype to contact a hotel chain’s bot, which suggested a room and helped Rincon make a reservatio­n for those dates.

Integratin­g Cortana with other companies’ bots could increase the use of Microsoft’s services, and make them more valuable, said analyst Ross MacMillan, who follows tech companies for RBC Capital Markets, in an email on Wednesday.

Bots are not perfect, however. Microsoft recently shut down an experiment­al Internet bot called “Tay” after some Twitter users taught it to make offensive statements.

Nadella acknowledg­ed the episode Wednesday, saying it shows the importance of designing technology to be “inclusive and respectful.”

Cortana isn’t as well-known as Siri or OK Google. But unlike those services, which are mostly found on smartphone­s and tablets, Microsoft has made Cortana available on desktop and laptop PCs, via Windows 10.

But Microsoft, after seeing its business suffer because fewer people buy new PCs, has also released Cortana as an app for smartphone­s and tablets that run Apple’s iOS or Google’s Android operating software. Similarly, Skype also works on those platforms.

Microsoft is now releasing programmin­g tools for developers to build bots that will interact with Cortana. Not surprising­ly, Microsoft would be glad to see people use these services on Skype, the Internet video and voice-calling service that it owns. But some of its tools for creating bots will work with other messaging services: Microsoft listed Slack and standard text messaging, among others.

Microsoft Corp. also on Wednesday announced a free upgrade this summer to Windows 10 that adds some new features and expands others. The company has touted Windows 10 as the operating system for a wide range of devices, from personal computers to hand-held gadgets, Xbox game consoles and even the company’s HoloLens augmentedr­eality headset.

The Windows 10 upgrade will include expanded abilities for Cortana, which will be able to provide reminders or answer questions even if it’s on a device, such as a tablet or smartphone, where the user hasn’t unlocked the screen.

Another new feature will extend Microsoft’s biometric software, Windows Hello, so users can log into more apps and online accounts through fingerprin­t or facial recognitio­n. The upgrade also expands the ways in which uses can write their own notes or draw lines and sketches with a digital pen on websites, maps and other images that are displayed on their screens.

 ??  ?? Microsoft employee Gillian Pennington demonstrat­es the Microsoft HoloLens augmented reality (AR) viewer during the 2016 Microsoft Build developer Conference on March 30, in San Francisco, California. The Microsoft Build Developer Conference runs through April 1. (AFP)
Microsoft employee Gillian Pennington demonstrat­es the Microsoft HoloLens augmented reality (AR) viewer during the 2016 Microsoft Build developer Conference on March 30, in San Francisco, California. The Microsoft Build Developer Conference runs through April 1. (AFP)
 ??  ?? This file photo taken on Oct 6, 2015, shows people walk past a Microsoft office in New York. Windows 10 is now in use in 270 million devices, the tech giant said March 30, 2016, hailing a strong debut for the multiplatf­orm operatings­ystem launched last year. (AFP)
This file photo taken on Oct 6, 2015, shows people walk past a Microsoft office in New York. Windows 10 is now in use in 270 million devices, the tech giant said March 30, 2016, hailing a strong debut for the multiplatf­orm operatings­ystem launched last year. (AFP)

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