HoloLens 2 Design & Development Workshop

Dejan Gajsek
2 min readAug 11, 2020

HoloLens 2 is the most exciting mixed reality enterprise headset on the market. In this workshop we are going to learn the hand gestures for authoring that are unique to the headset. The headset is used in military, healthcare and manufacturing environments.

Hand recognition and hand-tracking in Microsoft HoloLens 2 provides instinctual interactions for authors — from touching, hand rays and and HoloLens unique interactions such as air taps.

This workshop is a two parter. Nakisa Donnelly is going to demonstrate the developing process and hand gesturing capabilities. Eric Carter, who worked on the HoloLens 2 on the design engineering team, is going to speak about the UX/UI applications of the device.

Resources:

Project Assets

Hosted by

NAKISA DONNELLY - AR/VR Instructor

ERIC CARTER - formerHoloLens 2 Design Engineer

During the workshop, we’ll share:

→ Introduction to HoloLens 2 headset from developers’ point of view

→ How to start developing for HoloLens 2

→ Hand gestures and hand tracking capabilities of HoloLens 2

→ Spatial Mapping

→ How to use Mixed Reality Toolkit (MRTK)

→ How to interact with holograms

→ Design-specific features of the headset

At the end of the workshop, you’ll have:

→ A better understanding of HoloLens 2 capabilities and its use in enterprise sector

→ Device specific knowledge: hand gesturing, interacting with holograms, spatial mapping

→ UX/UI understanding of the headset

→ Fundamentals and frameworks for MRTK development

→ Answers to your specific questions about HoloLens 2 headset and AR/VR development process for it

About Your Instructors:

Nakisa Donnelly’s engineering and arts background combine for a unique approach to XR development. She has designed and developed projects for the HoloLens, Magic Leap, Oculus Quest, and Valve Index and teaches our 10-week online XR Development Course.

Eric Carter is an XR designer who helped Microsoft ship hand tracking on the HoloLens 2. After that he worked on Facebook Horizon with the team that made Oculus Quest First Steps. With more than a decade of prior experience working in game design, Eric brings a creative and user-centric focus to the projects he develops.

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