Upskill launches support for Microsoft HoloLens

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Upskill has been working on a platform to support augmented and mixed reality for almost as long as most people have been aware of the
concept
It began developing an agnostic AR/MR platform way back in 2010
Google Glass didn&t even appear until two years later
Today, the company announced the early release of Skylight for Microsoft HoloLens.Upskill has been developing Skylight as an operating
platform to work across all devices, regardless of the manufacturer, but company co-founder and CEO Brian Ballard sees something special
with HoloLens
&What HoloLens does for certain types of experiences, is it actually opens up a lot more real estate to display information in a way that
users can take advantage of,& Ballard explained.He believes the Microsoft device fits well within the broader approach his company has been
taking over the last several years to support the range of hardware on the market while developing solutions for hands-free and connected
workforce concepts.&This is about extending Skylight into the spatial computing environment making sure that the workflows, the
collaboration, the connectivity is seamless across all of these different devices,& he told TechCrunch.Microsoft itself just announced some
new HoloLens use cases for its Dynamics 365 platform around remote assistance and 3D layout, use cases which play to the HoloLens strengths,
but Ballard says his company is a partner with Microsoft, offering an enhanced, full-stack solution on top of what Microsoft is giving
customers out of the box.That is certainly something Microsoft&sTerry Farrell, director of product marketing for mixed reality at Microsoft
recognizes and acknowledges
&As adoption of Microsoft HoloLens continues to rapidly increase in industrial settings, Skylight offers a software platform that is
flexible and can scale to meet any number of applications well suited for mixed reality experiences,& he said in a statement.That involves
features like spatial content placement, which allows employees to work with digital content in HoloLens, while keeping their hands free to
work in the real world
They enhance this with the ability to see multiple reference materials across multiple windows at the same time, something we are used to
doing with a desktop computer, but not with a device on our faces like HoloLens
Finally, workers can use hand gestures and simple gazes to navigate in virtual space, directing applications or moving windows, as we are
used to doing with keyboard or mouse.Upskill also builds on the Windows 10 capabilities in HoloLens with its broad experience securely
connecting to back-end systems to pull the information into the mixed reality setting wherever it lives in the enterprise.The company is
based outside of Washington, D.C
in Vienna, Virginia
It has raised over $45 million, according to Crunchbase
Ballard says the company currently has 70 employees
Customers using Skylight include Boeing, GE, Coca-Cola, Telstra and Accenture.