The designer of Microsoft's Hololens augmented reality system, Alex Kipman, revealed that he's pumping the brakes on launching a consumer version of the product. The main reason, he told reporters at a TED conference in Vancouver, was because Microsoft has been badly burned by the failure of the Kinect, Recode reports.
While a $3,000 version of the Hololens is available for businesses and developers right now, Kipman says they're holding back on a consumer version for the foreseeable future.
"When I feel the world is ready, then we will allow normal people to buy it," Kipman said. "It could be as soon as we say 'yes,' and it could be as long as a 'very long time.'"
But, he said, being ready means more than just having great hardware; it means having enough content to make it of lasting use.
“If a consumer bought it today, they would have 12 things to do with it,” Kipman said. “And they would say ‘Cool, I bought a $3,000 product that I can do 12 things with and now it is collecting dust.'”
POLYGON
It might be for the best to hold off a bit- they can get the bugs and kinks ironed out, and also have a 'second generation product' launch as the first generation one on the market, and get a running start- but this does bum me out, I like what I have seen of HoloLens.
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