Skip to main content

What’s inside the Microsoft’s HoloLens’ holographic processor? Now we know

microsoft hololens hpu holographic
The Register
Beyond the difference in the realities offered by hardware like the HTC Vive and Microsoft HoloLens , one major aspect that separates them is where the processors are located. With the Vive or Oculus Rift, it’s in the host PC. With the HoloLens though, there’s a co-processor in the headset — though we knew very little about it.

Now, Microsoft has detailed what powers all of its augmented visuals, and it’s quite different than the kind of hardware used in many other devices out there.

Recommended Videos

For starters, it’s called an HPU, or Holographic Processing Unit, and it’s built upon the 28nm manufacturing process by major Taiwanese foundry TSMC. In comparison, AMD and Intel’s next generation processors are built using the 14nm FinFET design — the 28nm TSMC process is more similar to last-generation graphics hardware.

It features an impressive 24 cores, each of which handles a single sensor input/output, helping to craft the augmented visuals that HoloLens users see.

That HPU is paired up with an Intel Atom x86 chip, with 1GB of LPDDR3 memory. All of this is bundled into a 12mm by 12mm package, making the chip quite compact – something that is of course very important when you’re talking about a mobile peripheral like the HoloLens headset.

Another important aspect is power draw. If the HPU required hundreds of watts of power, it would drain any internal battery in no time, but Microsoft’s design is very energy efficient. It draws less than 10 watts when in use, and it does the job of “pre-baking” data before sending it on to the CPU, which reduces the job that the Atom chip has to do.

More specifically, the HPU handles sensor, environment, and gesture recognition data. Its design is hard-wired to make these operations more efficient than a general-purpose processor, like the Atom it’s paired with. This is similar to Intel’s new Project Alloy, which uses an Intel Core processor to handle sensor data.

Where they differ, though, is that Intel uses one chip for everything, while Microsoft teams up the Atom CPU with its custom HPU.

This certainly gives us a much better idea of how HoloLens works. Now it’s just a question of Microsoft refining the design, bringing the price down and fixing a few of its quirks.

Jon Martindale
Jon Martindale is the Evergreen Coordinator for Computing, overseeing a team of writers addressing all the latest how to…
You won’t be taking Microsoft’s HoloLens 3 into the metaverse
Microsoft HoloLens 2

As rival Apple is rumored to be eyeing an entrance into the metaverse, Microsoft, an early proponent of mixed and augmented reality applications, is criticized for its blurry vision behind the company's own HoloLens strategy. While HoloLens notched big early wins, including scoring a U.S. Department of Defense contract, subsequent delays, project cancellations, and high-profile executive departures may have resulted in the death of the HoloLens 3. Still, despite a scathing profile by Business Insider, it appears that Microsoft remains, at least publicly, committed to its HoloLens endeavors for now. The company has gone on record to refute the publication's reporting that HoloLens 3 has been killed.

There are a number of factors that may be causing Microsoft to pivot from its early bet on HoloLens, but the Microsoft profile cited internal divisions and the lack of a unified strategy among the top reasons for concern. As a result of the chaos, it appears that the largest collateral damage to Microsoft's infighting is the cancellation of its next-generation HoloLens 3 hardware.

Read more
What will Apple call its VR headset? We might have an answer
oculus vr headset drm revive injector

Over the last week, we’ve seen a huge amount of news and rumors concerning Apple’s planned mixed-reality headset. Now, one of the most accurate Apple leakers has chimed in with more fuel for the fire -- but it’s not good news if you’re concerned about the device’s price.

The news comes from Bloomberg reporter Mark Gurman, whose track record for Apple rumors is one of the best in the biz. In his latest Power On newsletter, Gurman explains that Apple’s headset could cost upwards of $2,000, potentially making it one of the most expensive Apple devices.

Read more
We now know what the self-driving Apple Car might look like
A render that shows what the Apple Car might look like.

Thanks to several 3D concept renders, we now know what the future self-driving Apple Car might look like.

Vanarama, a British car-leasing company, took inspiration from other Apple products, as well as Apple patents, in order to accurately picture the rumored Apple car.

Read more