Skip to main content

Microsoft, Intel team up on affordable AR headsets, Echo competitor, and more

microsoft intel project evo team up on affordable ar headsets
At the Windows Hardware Engineering Community event in Shenzhen, China, Microsoft has announced a new collaboration with Intel. Referred to as Project Evo, this partnership is intended to harness the strengths of both companies in an effort to further propel the way we interact with computers across a broad range of applications.

It seems that a competitor to the Amazon Echo and Google Now will be among the first products spawned by Project Evo, according to a blog post by Terry Myers, executive vice president of Microsoft’s Windows and Devices group. Future Windows 10 devices will support far-field communications, which will allow users to ask Cortana a question or issue a command from across the room.

Enhanced security features are also on their way to Windows 10. Windows Hello will apparently offer advances in biometric authentication, while Microsoft and Intel will contribute insights and intelligence to help keep users safe.

Project Evo will also help push the boundaries of mixed reality computing. We’ve known for some time that Microsoft has grand designs for the future with regard to this technology, but today’s announcement reiterates the scale and scope of what’s set to come.

The high-spec HoloLens remains a big part of Microsoft’s plans for mixed reality, but the device will be accompanied by several more affordable headsets in the hope of bringing this kind of computing to a broader range of users. The company has collaborated with Intel to produce specifications that will power mixed reality headsets from the likes of Acer, Asus, Dell, HP, and Lenovo.

Project Evo will even impact Microsoft’s gaming interests, with innovations pertaining to esports, game broadcasting, support for new visual standards like high dynamic range and wide color gamut, spatial audio, and the introduction of Xbox controllers with native Bluetooth support.

Based on the breadth of its impact, it seems that Project Evo will be an ongoing effort to foster impactful innovation across a broad range of Microsoft’s hardware and software programs. While it remains to be seen how quickly these innovations will reach users, it’s good to see the company keeping one eye on the future.

Brad Jones
Brad is an English-born writer currently splitting his time between Edinburgh and Pennsylvania. You can find him on Twitter…
Microsoft Teams may liven up meetings with casual game integration
Microsoft Teams in Together mode on a laptop.

Microsoft Teams could get a surprising new feature that might spice up your boring set of daily meetings -- though your supervisor may not like it.

According to The Verge, Microsoft is currently internally testing classic games like Solitaire and Wordament in Teams, for a special use in meetings and hybrid work scenarios.

Read more
New Live Share feature for Teams is like screen sharing 2.0
Microsoft Teams in Together mode on a laptop.

At its annual Build developer conference, Microsoft has announced Live Share for Microsoft Teams, a new feature that could replace boring screen shares. The experience is designed to make your meetings more collaborative and engaging, so that you can interact with and share content in a meeting in new ways.

Microsoft believes it can help you better interact with shared apps directly in a Teams meeting window. It'll be up to app developers to enable it, but Live Share in the Teams meeting stage should allow you to annotate, edit, zoom in and out, and interact with shared content.

Read more
Microsoft Build 2022: What to expect for Teams, Edge, and Windows
microsoft build 2018 what to expect header getty

Unlike Google and Apple, Microsoft Build is usually committed to being a developer-heavy event. That means more on-stage coding and developer sessions and fewer Surface announcements. You can, however, expect to hear new info centered around how developers can create experiences for Windows and the other Microsoft 365 services like Microsoft Teams.

Last year's Build conference saw Microsoft tease what we now know as Windows 11, as well as detail several big features for Teams and Microsoft Edge.

Read more