Tbf you could easily do that with augmented reality. In all honesty we probably have the technology to make some big stage surrounded with ar screens that show whatever information is being presented by the card reader. Easy to do not really. But I'm fairly certain we have everything needed for such a thing.
Well if we invent a chip that we could put in our heads (Elon is already on it with Neuralink) and implemented an AR system within that we could have practical holograms. Although they wouldn’t technically be holograms. We will probably have this technology in a few decades.
@Riley Dwyer This. He's wacky, and his companies have done a lot for their fields, but Elon is still a detached billionaire who does not truly empathize with the middle class and below. If anything, I'm more of a Richard Branson guy because he actually helps the common folk once in a while. His casinos pay out. His hotels are affordable. He started Virgin Galactic long before Elon bought SpaceX. He's a lot like John McAfee, minus the whole druggie hedonist side.
@@joshbentley2307 That is called AR and already exists to a degree, like places in Japan having digital signs and waymarks you only see on your screen.
Expectations are bound meet disappointment when the word hologram is thrown around so loosely by the media. "2Pac performing live as a hologram!" sounds way cooler than "2D video of 2Pac projected onto a translucent screen using an effect dating back to the 19th century called pepper's ghost".
This video kinda undersells "Pepper's Ghost". It doesn't project on thin air and you can't walk around it and see it from every angle, but for purposes of a stage show or amusement park ride it can be very effective! It's not technically a "hologram" in the truest sense of the word but people wanting a decent illusion of a dead celebrity or animated character performing on a real stage alongside live performers got what they came for.
I mean, a lot of technology is impossible until its not. Like how sending data needed to have wires and the prospect of "connecting devices in nearly zero delay across the world" would be laughably impossible in the past when we had the bulky room sized computers. Or even the idea of "yeah this building sized computer network but a billion times faster and make it palm sized, with full color display."
he doesn't say imposibble but we still have a long way before holographics enter the customer markets. same as computer they already got the wireless data transfer in 60s but now its common today almost 70 years later. so we can expect holographics volumetric display in 2060/2070.
@Thomas Grey yes but relaying data through air was a "physics" issue because you just couldnt do that with the tech they had back then. Sure you can explain that "its just using waves" but its more than that. "Device A can send a signal to Device B without direct connection or knowing the location of Device B, by sending waves through the air, but in a way that no other device can see the waves sent from Device A, unlike a ripple that would be felt by everyone in a pool the same". What I said sounds completely ridicilous if said in context of "yeah we can send morse codes through wires, which allows people to talk when in different places!"
Y’all are too optimistic. We’re reaching the plateau of energy, physics, and practical constraints in regards to technology. Some things will just be sci-fi and laughed off as zeerust like flying cars or personal jet pack use or ray guns.
They knew you could probably transmit over the air eventually, it's one of the revalations Tesla had. They had more mechinistic dreams for it but they knew about the basic idea. It's more like if they predicted DNA was a thing, and that we would be able to easily edit it at will however we want. That said, the fact is that something has to stop the light beam in the right place and you need a physical something you have good control over, and a very very very specific light source for each method. We CAN do that, just not in a gas cloud of nitrogen and oxygen. It's like wondering why the computers do their thinking with your wall circuits, it's just fully different. The dust method is wicked cool and is our best bet for that kind of thing.
Supposedly the Air Force is already experimenting with plasma-based weaponry at the Area 51 facility. They're devastating, but inaccurate, not energy efficient and prone to fatal malfunction for the device itself. Of course all of this could very well be a conspiracy fairy tale.
@@GlidingZephyr it's a laser based stuff that seems to really get the job done in that area of energy weaponry. But that's usually more anti-air stuff. And those rail guns are so accurate and can fire for so long they might as well be energy weapons since they hit so hard
@@dissonanceparadiddle Yeah, Israel has an excellent laser based anti-missile weapon system that I know of. Advanced rail guns could change the face of warfare: Who needs nukes when you can execute a surgical kinetic strike from the opposite hemisphere?
@@GlidingZephyr and then there's of course the satellite-based weapon system where they just drop a metal rod and let gravity and inertia do the rest of the work, absolutely terrifying
@@dissonanceparadiddle yea the fact that call of duty ghost has a relatively tame depiction compared to the actual devastation that the rods would create is terrifying
Also it is could be risky to shoot lasers and pointI it to the a point that they don't cause some sort of harm or long term affect that if the person keeps constantly pointing it at another person
I personally believe that one day AR will be as incorporated into our lives as smartphones have become. Seamlessly bridging the gap between the physical and non-physical worlds we’ve created.
Maybe, but the infrastructure isn't there yet. Think of Pokémon Go or the upcoming Witcher mobile game as the introduction. As devices get more advanced their display could evolve into what we know as AR
@@pcm1011 Hence the reason I said one day. We don’t have the infrastructure for that level of AR the same way we didn’t have cell phone towers back in the late 1800’s and early 1900’s. I believe AR and VR is that early on in its development that we most likely won’t even be alive to see it’s true potential.
Now cortana makes sense because nearly everyone in halo is wearing a helmet or has a chip in their head like captain Keyes that has augmented reality that helps them aim and stuff
@@LoneWanderer013 well considering plankton produces their food from photosynthesis. Is quite fitting that he is having a meal made out of light (hologram)
I think the "holograms" of Metal Gear Rising are one of my favorite forms, as they utilize AR displays and/or ferromagnetic technology via "lithium niobate crystals" to achieve the effect of a projected image/object in a 3D space while still having a some-what grainy, crude appearance due to the technology still being relatively new during the game's setting(keep in mind that Metal Gear Rising: takes place during 2018, which was the future at the time of the game's release, but is now the not-so distant past for us) and really only accessible to those who have a lot of money to afford it, such as governments, corporations, PMC's, etc. A lot of the stuff in Metal Gear Rising is really cool and interesting as it can be described within a science-fiction setting and still be logically sound, barring the absurdity of nanomachines of course.
In my sci-fi novel that takes place in the 55th century, everyone has a biochip in their heads and shares a vast, networked AR space. They have practical use of holographic type displays and such, but it's being projected into their brains instead of the environment.
Cool idea! Keep writing and don't let yourself be discouraged by some stupid people who can do nothing but drag others down! What is your novel called? (I'm a huge nerd for scify books)
@@herickferraz4850 yeaaaah. The story is one of the few I actually enjoyed from school. I think it’s so interesting and I’d love to see a big channel talk about it.
@@thatgaming1940 nah it’s worse, they forcefully handicap their own citizens to make everyone “equal.” It all happened through amendments to the constitution
This is the dumbest fucking short story I ever read in school. I fucking hated it because it's just a really really fucking dumb analogy to various equality movements and communism without fucking understanding either. First off, movements like the disability access ones aren't fucking about making people worse to be "on our level", it's to make fucking living easier. Also communism isn't about equalizing people. The main quote Marx is known for is "Each according to his need. Each according to his ability". This is a naked admission of the lack of perfect equality under the various forms of socialism. Some people need more and some people have to give more as everyone is different. Thanks for reminding of the name of this short story cause it keeps coming to me as a memory and then I start thinking madly about it. I looked up when it was published and of course it was in the late-60s, so weird scare-mongering about the civil rights movement and Soviet communism. On my final note, I want to personally go to your house and hit you over the head with a rolled up newspaper as it makes a soft "plonk" noise for reminding me of something from middle school English class I thought was monumentally stupid
“If an elderly but distinguished scientist says that something is possible, he is almost certainly right; but if he says that it is impossible, he is very probably wrong.” If I can’t chat with darling over five thousand light years with cute holograms and warm kisses then you can’t either.
@@shinysphinx8849 holograms = hollow grams (grandma). Osteoporosis is a common condition in elderly women that causes the bones to be hollower than they should be
@@shinysphinx8849 the joke is holograms sounds like Hollow Grams. Osteoporosis makes your bones hollow so to stop Grams from becoming hollow she needs her meds
I really like the idea used in the 2002 movie "The Time Machine" where Orlando Jones' character was a hologram that was projected onto a series of glass panels in the middle of the room. I noticed you never mentioned it in this video, but I was really wandering if that sort of technology might be possible someday.
Another way to make something like a hologram is by using drones with lights on them and programming them to fly around(this is already a thing). However, the drones we have right now are way too big and way too loud to use as a good replacement for ordinary screens to put inside any room.
@MitchTheYoshi I just watched far from home and it's similar but not really because what I meant wasn't projecting light onto air but literally attaching a really smal led to a really smal and quiet drone and then programming both the drone and the light to display a 3d image or video. If you look up "drone light show" you can see what I mean but then imagine it with hundreds or thousands of tiny little drones quietly flying around in a living room.
Gatebox and their 6.6 foot anime hologram will be as out of date as black/white TVs are today in the future when we can physically nail an anime hologram.
All the ways I see free floating volumetric displays working mostly revolves around things like ferromagnets, where you are using massive particles rather than massless particles forming your display. Functionally, this can be identical. If you want the cool translucent look, that isn’t too hard. It’s even cooler because you can actually touch it!
I think vapor/mist displays with multiple proyectors to get a somewhat tridimensional image are also possible: you would get the misty or cloudy look. We would probably need new physical principles that we currently ignore to get something beyond that. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fog_display
@@ZetaFuzzMachine It's maybe extremely difficult. The way I imagine it is having something like pixels... Or voxels in this case I guess. You would have arbitrarily small magnets which each correspond to ferromagnetic particles. You turn the magnet on and off to different strengths to move it farther up and down across the display. This way, you get both horizontal and vertical movement without making complex magnetic fields. But I don't know if this works. While it may, you would have to be really careful to not get interference between each individual magnet and ferromagnet pair. Most likely, this means using superconductors which is possible, but it creates a practical maximum resolution and isn't really feasible right now. And that's my nerd speech :)
4:40 - In the landmark cyberpunk novel Neuromancer, there's a character who uses hyper-realistic laser holograms like Mysterio in Spider-Man: Far From Home. He usually uses them as illusions / distractions, but at one point, he uses them *offensively* to blind an attacker
@@bruno_kunda Because it's fun. Don't see the problem in people wanting to make scientific sense out of inherently fictional worlds. That's why there are so many books in the Star Wars lore that people like reading including myself, it's just the fun of getting invested in a science fiction world. Sure it's dorky and pointless, but no need to negatively view it.
I like how this channel went from geography facts, to general knowledge about history, to just general knowledge, to making weird crap, to actual science facts. I wonder what will come next?
I guess next will be reading scientific papers, them to something absolutely and completely different. Like.. fursuit reviews or phone drop tests or something? 🤣🤣
I kind of feel like it is a good safety precaution to keep holograms encased in glass anyway. Otherwise it could be weaponized, blurring the line between reality and fantasy, or simply obscuring peoples view. Besides, you can already do a lot of interesting things with augmented reality anyways, which ethically gates volumetric imagery: you can't be exposed to them without giving consent in the form of putting on glasses, lenses (or cybernetic eyes).
I remember in middle school there was some assembly about drunk driving etc. and they had 2 spotlights on opposite sides of the gym, one behind all the kids on the bleachers, and one next to the fat guy telling us that beer is bad. The 2 spotlights were angled directly at each other and at some points in the show, created holograms like cubes spinning around. Maybe it doesn't quite count because some viewing angles of that image would block out the spotlights, but from the oblong angle I saw it from, it really was a hologram, even if they used a lil fog machine and low light in the gym to make it more visible.
Honestly, I'm ok with those kinds of displays only being available through the use of AR technology. You'd be able to opt out of all that digital noise by simply taking off your goggles or whatever future device they use to access those technologies.
@@eziospaghettiauditore8369 Highly doubt it. Much cheaper to mass produce and distribute headsets or other small devices than something that requires surgery.
The hologram projector on the ceiling of K's apartment in Blade Runner 2049 (Joi), is the most realistic looking technology that could happen in real life in the future.
In the future it will be awesome to replaces my current glasses with AR glasses (with the correct lens), where the technology can fit into my glass frames. If not I can always undergo eye surgery.
Holograms are impossible because even if you manage to stop light in place it wouldn't be visible since the light isn't even reaching your eyes. I think the only way to see holograms like in the media would be to litteraly project accurate 3d images directly into your eyes that would react and move accordingly to your perspective, maybe when we are able to throw light into our eyes in a manageable way we could do some badass shit like hograms and irl HUDs
Wait did anyone ever thought about shit like this? I never saw anything about projecting images into our eyes holy shit I'ma go down some rabbit hole rn brb
INTRODUCTION: The Virtual Retinal Display (VRD) is a new technology for creating visual images. It was developed at the Human Interface Technology Laboratory (HIT Lab) by Dr. Thomas A. Furness III. The VRD creates images by scanning low power laser light directly onto the retina. This special method results in images that are bright, high contrast and high resolution. In this paper, we describe how the VRD functions, the special consequences of its mechanism of action and potential medical applications of the VRD, including surgical displays and displays for people with low vision. A description of its safety analysis will also be included. In one set of tests we had a number of patients with partial loss of vision view images with the VRD. There were two groups of subjects: patients with macular degeneration, a degenerative disease of the retina and patients with keratoconus. Typical VRD images are on the order of 300 nanowatts. VRD images are also readily viewed superimposed on ambient room light. In our low vision test subjects, 5 out of 8 subjects with macular degeneration felt the VRD images were better and brighter than the CRT or paper images and they were able to reach the same or better level of resolution. All patients with Keratoconus were able to resolve lines of test several lines smaller with the VRD than with their own correction. Further, they all felt that the VRD images were sharper and easier to view. The VRD is a safe new display technology.
I'm cool with Holo Lens if it means i won't burn my retinas. Now we just gotta figure out how to create artificial stimulus (stuff like touch and taste).
I dont think the other senses will get involved so easily, sadly. Ever heard of smell-o-vision? It flopped way, way back somewhere in the 20th century cant remember when, but I think it was actually pretty early.
@@Warvell1 The problem with past forms of smell-o-vision is that it's not artificial stimulus. The smell is real and has to be dispensed by a machine that you have to keep filled. I'm not 100% sure about smell but I know there's been modern progress on artificial taste. Of course all the senses would be solvable if we replaced the physical screen with a direct brain interface.
The idea of R2D2 supercooling a room to near absolute zero simultaneously freezing Obi-Wan and Luke while burning their retinas out just to display a hologram was a hilarious mental image
It's science fiction and fantasy. All George Lucas did was take fantasy tropes and place them in a sci fi setting. So it's both, Science Fiction and Fantasy.
No not necessarily, you just have to alter them slightly and imagine them all wearing glasses. For Halo they have chips in thier brains, they don't count.
The comments break down into "of course, physics" and "I didn't watch the video but it's totally wrong age aged like milk but I say aged like fine wine because I don't understand metaphors and I only read the headline and didn't watch the explanation but know it's wrong because I saw an article about how holograms are real. .. I also didn't read the article just the headline." and my favorite "what if you take one technology that isn't practical and make it impossibly small and even more impractical and create something that is kinda like hologramish but isn't and is totally not practical and I will only imagine it and expect others to do the work."
You know what’s insane to me, is a movie about god damn magicians came up with the most attainable version of a sci fi hologram yet. The movie is called “now you see me”, and towards the beginning, it features a hologram comprised of filling a room with fog, and having multiple projectors in multiple places around the room all project toward a single point, where it catches the fog and makes it appear 3d
Yeah I realized that the much more realistic future is almost certainly going to be everyone wearing AR glasses (or contacts or bionics) and the holograms would be something seen through those. One of those virtual worlds overlaid on top of the real one that you access via your AR tech of choice, which is still a cool idea
This is purely science fiction, but I feel like if there was some sort of energy that could trap/isolate/manipulate photons, you could probably create a sort of "interactive light" that can be programmed to any sort of configuration that can be touched/manipulated by hand, just like in the movies, without any of the mentioned negative side effects.
We do have holograms - sort of. It's an interesting phenomenon that occurs when you put an object inside two mirrored bowls (it's called a mirascope). What I would really like to see is what happens if you put a lens on top of a mirascope and if a mirascope could work with a volumetric display inside. If you could craft the lens to make a projection appear larger than the actual object and the output of the display would work, you could theoretically craft a (mostly) working hologram (Mirascopes are directional, unlike an actual hologram) and I suspect that you cannot put a lens over the mirascope without breaking the illusion, or at lease causing distortion.
Now we have drone shows, where every vertex of a 3D model is represented as a light-emitting drone. If in the future those could be miniaturized to mosquito size, then...
@@laartwork What if it was a swarm of nanotech drones that live in a matchbox-sized device and they work as part of a redundancy matrix. On the user end it's as simple as opening the matchbox to unleash the bots and closing it to return them home
I thought the same thing initially. He's redefining the word so that some of these examples lay outside of his set of parameters. But he's actually correct within the context of the specific type of hologram he'd talking about. For now anyways.
Because those examples work differently than the way media portrays them. Throughout media it usually works like a projector except casting a 3D image. You should be able to put your hand through it which a volumetric display that we have irl wouldn't allow. AR like the Hololens probably fits the bill the best even if it technically isn't displaying in reality.
Maybe a better way to say it is "holograms are pretty cool, but they're NOT like in the movies". Also, the technology of actual holograms has been pretty stagnant since the 1980s or so. I remember when they were suddenly everywhere--since then they've been relegated mostly to cheap trinkets and anti-counterfeiting gadgets.
(I think the problem here is that holography got developed to a moderately high level as an *analog* technology, but the crazy development in communication and entertainment tech since then was all digital. Computer-generated holograms are possible and have been made, but the tech just hasn't gotten very far, and genuinely holographic real-time computer displays still seem to be impractical. All modern attempts to do a 3D or volumetric display use some other technology.)
really? because I found that terrifying, the potential uses for hologram technology will all be tyrannical in reality. Innovation is a military thing first, entertainment 2nd.
@@gottaproxy8826... okay. Obviously you're imagining the military using some Sci fi holograms, which would be very useful - but there are hard physics resisting making something truly like our sci fi dreams. I don't see the military using holograms any time soon.
Idea: we make a volumetric display on the super ball field that can pop out of the ground at half time then animate and project the entire ending of the band geeks episode
Even with AR though there are VR mixed reality headsets that are affordable to the average middle class consumer that also do AR as well. Granted it isn't as good and also currently requires being tethered to a PC, but even on the consumer level the technology is there
Lighting engineer. We are close to finishing a hologram project. Imagine every ceiling light at a retail store being connected in a mesh network, and each having a hologram projector. The goal is to have something like a virtual assistant that you could interact with using an app.
They really should add a touchscreen display to the AirPods case and turn it into an iPod. They should probably add a clip as well because for most people it turns into pocket clutter, apple should intend for users to clip the case to their clothing.
Another fun fact: when first subway project in 19th century was presented to public, well-known scientists of that time said, what subway train, running on crazy speed of 25 km/hr will displace all air from tunnels and all passengers will suffocate. So never say something is impossible. You should say " i think, this, possibly, impossible with currently available level of technology" instead.
Wevalways knew flight was possible because we have seen birds do it. No one said never in a million years. What we don't see is light stopping. It is impractical and can be done in AR so that's how it will be done.
Man this so reminds me of a argument I had with someone about 9/11. They insisted on telling me that the planes that hit the towers were actually a hologram. This led to me explaining how a hologram actually works and how photo realistic projection wasn't even possible at that time. Not surprising they were just a baby when it happened while I had just completed basic training in the Army. Our technology does have its limitations, but explaining this to younger people whose experience with tech comes from using a smartphone, is like pulling teeth. They really need to teach more Physics in the schools so more people understand that you can't just break the laws of Physics no matter how much time passes.
The only way i see holograms like we see in movies happening is through th nanotechnology... Think of them as tiny tiny drones we can manipulate/instruct using *SOME* form of tech...
Denno Coil is an anime that I think has the best possible depiction of future AR tech. they use glasses that overlay the AR world on the real world, that are hooked up to mobile phones.
Doesn't matter. There is no advantage to the "real" holograms over them being generated through Augmented Reality. Hopefully we get sensible glasses soon.
@@michaelbalfour3170 3D ar displays are useful since they can act as displays without the need of the real physical display. You can have signs, TVs, clocks, everything shown through AR without the need of real things. You can also project these holograms to create objects, lets say you are a car designer, having a manifestation of your work would be very helpful
The closest we'll ever get to holograms are digital versions of whatever you need as long as you're wearing the proper headset. Maybe around the size of goggles of we can miniaturize it enough I don't see it working for some form of contact lense like in some sci fi media but I'd love to be proven wrong.
There was a time when blue led was impossible. I know completely different problem but still i dont believe technology will remain same after 100 years
Forgot to mention the 3d mist projectors? Used in semi dark rooms and project a mostly invisible mist(not water, it was some kind of liquid that made real tiny droplets) down into an enclosed space and light hits the mist from all around. Can't find the link for the one I remember though. It created 3d images you can view from different angles.
AR honestly seems way cooler than holograms to me. Being able to alter the way you perceive the world around you with a settings menu like in a game would be absolutely life changing
No they are not, you just lack imagination. Imagine nanodrones able to fly around and form themselves into complex shapes or images you then have a functional Hologram.
@@b.o.j.1442 So you really believe that it's impossible to put an LED on a small flying platform and have them communicate in unison to display images/ information? Because I just explained EXACTLY how to accomplish the very same concept but only maybe a bit more macroscopic but does that bring it anymore into the realm of reality than a "Nanoscale" flying platform? Both are equally plausible, it's just one is larger... Slightly.
I imagine a sci-fi hologram using another piece of sci-fi tech: nanobots, which I remember hearing actually exist but I'm not sure. If they do exist, they're nowhere near advanced enough yet, but it's not hard to imagine a "projector" just dispensing a flying swarm of them to a designated area, before the nanobots light up as the display. The batteries would suck even if they're firefly sized, but they could constantly fly in and out of the "projector." The hard part there would be fitting all of that coordination code on them, but maybe magnets could interface with the projector? I'll let a smart person figure that out
Actually no. Real holograms where recently invented. They are very basic at this point, only one particle can be controlled in 3d space. They are using lazers to control the position of a particle then hitting it with another lazer of whatever color is wanted. Basically we have one pixel holograms at this point.
@@fastmovingvolcanomatter Right. But this technology will be improved on. Giveing way to better ways to make holograms. To say holograms are impossible is just stupid lol.
frankly i personally think my lizards will be the ultimate replacement to this technology, they just go in your head and bite your brain so you imagine the hologram
I'm disappointed I won't soon be able to summon my Blue Eyes White Dragon to wipe out people's life points
Tbf you could easily do that with augmented reality.
In all honesty we probably have the technology to make some big stage surrounded with ar screens that show whatever information is being presented by the card reader.
Easy to do not really. But I'm fairly certain we have everything needed for such a thing.
Yeah, they actually use augmented reality in Zexal, a later Yu-Gi-Oh series, and thats way more possible
Hang in there, bud. I'm doing my best
You might be able to wipe out their eye points realistically tho
My celtic knight will have something to say about that! And now I move my flaming swordsman into attack position!
Imagine people from the future being like "this aged well"
Well if we invent a chip that we could put in our heads (Elon is already on it with Neuralink) and implemented an AR system within that we could have practical holograms.
Although they wouldn’t technically be holograms.
We will probably have this technology in a few decades.
Yes
@@joshbentley2307 Elon says he will but won't fulfill, plus who would want him to have access to your brain
@Riley Dwyer This. He's wacky, and his companies have done a lot for their fields, but Elon is still a detached billionaire who does not truly empathize with the middle class and below. If anything, I'm more of a Richard Branson guy because he actually helps the common folk once in a while. His casinos pay out. His hotels are affordable. He started Virgin Galactic long before Elon bought SpaceX. He's a lot like John McAfee, minus the whole druggie hedonist side.
@@joshbentley2307 That is called AR and already exists to a degree, like places in Japan having digital signs and waymarks you only see on your screen.
Expectations are bound meet disappointment when the word hologram is thrown around so loosely by the media. "2Pac performing live as a hologram!" sounds way cooler than "2D video of 2Pac projected onto a translucent screen using an effect dating back to the 19th century called pepper's ghost".
No one builds impossible expectations like the media.
I disgree. "2Pac projected onto a translucent screen using an effect dating back to the 19th century called pepper's ghost" sounds much cooler to me.
"2pac's ghost, brought to you by Pepper's ghost" could've been a good headline
So all those Vocaloid concerts were a lie too?
This video kinda undersells "Pepper's Ghost". It doesn't project on thin air and you can't walk around it and see it from every angle, but for purposes of a stage show or amusement park ride it can be very effective!
It's not technically a "hologram" in the truest sense of the word but people wanting a decent illusion of a dead celebrity or animated character performing on a real stage alongside live performers got what they came for.
This guy sounds like he could voice a muppet
underrated comment
Lol, I didn’t notice until I read this
THANK YOU!
I was going to say the same thing
That's why I listen on 2x speed because holy hell is that slow af
My childhood, innocence and dreams of the future have all been ruined and broken in just one simple title
AR is pretty sick tho
@@westernspirits9059 and it's also able to reach consumer level price within a decade more or less
@@robbieaulia6462 ye
@@robbieaulia6462 You can get some rudimentary AR stuff for $300 with the quest 2. It's no hololens, but it's a cheap way to experience some basic AR.
Tbh AR is better than holograms, Im pretty sure that AR can be more realistic, energy efficient and precise than actual holograms.
I mean, a lot of technology is impossible until its not. Like how sending data needed to have wires and the prospect of "connecting devices in nearly zero delay across the world" would be laughably impossible in the past when we had the bulky room sized computers. Or even the idea of "yeah this building sized computer network but a billion times faster and make it palm sized, with full color display."
he doesn't say imposibble but we still have a long way before holographics enter the customer markets. same as computer they already got the wireless data transfer in 60s but now its common today almost 70 years later. so we can expect holographics volumetric display in 2060/2070.
@Thomas Grey yes but relaying data through air was a "physics" issue because you just couldnt do that with the tech they had back then.
Sure you can explain that "its just using waves" but its more than that.
"Device A can send a signal to Device B without direct connection or knowing the location of Device B, by sending waves through the air, but in a way that no other device can see the waves sent from Device A, unlike a ripple that would be felt by everyone in a pool the same".
What I said sounds completely ridicilous if said in context of "yeah we can send morse codes through wires, which allows people to talk when in different places!"
@Thomas Grey there is literally a video of a photon being suspended in one spot .. and its only a start.. it will be done in the near future
Y’all are too optimistic. We’re reaching the plateau of energy, physics, and practical constraints in regards to technology. Some things will just be sci-fi and laughed off as zeerust like flying cars or personal jet pack use or ray guns.
They knew you could probably transmit over the air eventually, it's one of the revalations Tesla had. They had more mechinistic dreams for it but they knew about the basic idea.
It's more like if they predicted DNA was a thing, and that we would be able to easily edit it at will however we want.
That said, the fact is that something has to stop the light beam in the right place and you need a physical something you have good control over, and a very very very specific light source for each method. We CAN do that, just not in a gas cloud of nitrogen and oxygen. It's like wondering why the computers do their thinking with your wall circuits, it's just fully different.
The dust method is wicked cool and is our best bet for that kind of thing.
The plasma based holograms(the butterfly one) have a lot of promise ..... But they are currently big loud and unsafe
Supposedly the Air Force is already experimenting with plasma-based weaponry at the Area 51 facility. They're devastating, but inaccurate, not energy efficient and prone to fatal malfunction for the device itself. Of course all of this could very well be a conspiracy fairy tale.
@@GlidingZephyr it's a laser based stuff that seems to really get the job done in that area of energy weaponry. But that's usually more anti-air stuff. And those rail guns are so accurate and can fire for so long they might as well be energy weapons since they hit so hard
@@dissonanceparadiddle Yeah, Israel has an excellent laser based anti-missile weapon system that I know of. Advanced rail guns could change the face of warfare: Who needs nukes when you can execute a surgical kinetic strike from the opposite hemisphere?
@@GlidingZephyr and then there's of course the satellite-based weapon system where they just drop a metal rod and let gravity and inertia do the rest of the work, absolutely terrifying
@@dissonanceparadiddle yea the fact that call of duty ghost has a relatively tame depiction compared to the actual devastation that the rods would create is terrifying
"Some of you might be asking, then: Why not just shoot a laser?"
I ask myself that on a daily basis.
Do you know how expensive those kinds of lasers are
Also it is could be risky to shoot lasers and pointI it to the a point that they don't cause some sort of harm or long term affect that if the person keeps constantly pointing it at another person
@@atherapists3331 make em cheap?
@@rxm7874 it's more of a rare material issue than anything
@@atherapists3331 okay and? craft it down to common material issue. simple
I personally believe that one day AR will be as incorporated into our lives as smartphones have become. Seamlessly bridging the gap between the physical and non-physical worlds we’ve created.
Maybe, but the infrastructure isn't there yet. Think of Pokémon Go or the upcoming Witcher mobile game as the introduction. As devices get more advanced their display could evolve into what we know as AR
Brain Computer Interfaces babeyyyty
@@pcm1011 Hence the reason I said one day. We don’t have the infrastructure for that level of AR the same way we didn’t have cell phone towers back in the late 1800’s and early 1900’s. I believe AR and VR is that early on in its development that we most likely won’t even be alive to see it’s true potential.
Yeah, maybe.
Yes, and I think, there are moments where we are not wearing them. Like you do not always use a car for everything.
Now cortana makes sense because nearly everyone in halo is wearing a helmet or has a chip in their head like captain Keyes that has augmented reality that helps them aim and stuff
Here's the thing about that. How can the elites see her too? I wouldn't think they would have chips in their head since they don't need them
@@donaldbaird7849 guess that nullifies my logic,
Maybe they just see a blue light and and hear her talk
Can totally see holographic food as the next weight loss craze
Plankton was ahead of the curve with his holographic meatloaf
"This virtual fudge is great"
"Not as great as this cyberfudge"
@@LoneWanderer013 well considering plankton produces their food from photosynthesis. Is quite fitting that he is having a meal made out of light (hologram)
Holographic meatloaf? MY FAVORITE!!
@@darkolosus Huh, you're right!
I think the "holograms" of Metal Gear Rising are one of my favorite forms, as they utilize AR displays and/or ferromagnetic technology via "lithium niobate crystals" to achieve the effect of a projected image/object in a 3D space while still having a some-what grainy, crude appearance due to the technology still being relatively new during the game's setting(keep in mind that Metal Gear Rising: takes place during 2018, which was the future at the time of the game's release, but is now the not-so distant past for us) and really only accessible to those who have a lot of money to afford it, such as governments, corporations, PMC's, etc. A lot of the stuff in Metal Gear Rising is really cool and interesting as it can be described within a science-fiction setting and still be logically sound, barring the absurdity of nanomachines of course.
In my sci-fi novel that takes place in the 55th century, everyone has a biochip in their heads and shares a vast, networked AR space. They have practical use of holographic type displays and such, but it's being projected into their brains instead of the environment.
nobody cares! :DDD
nobody cares! :DDD
@Rishab Tirupathi noe iz nodd :D
That’s a pretty interesting way of having holograms work.
Cool idea! Keep writing and don't let yourself be discouraged by some stupid people who can do nothing but drag others down!
What is your novel called?
(I'm a huge nerd for scify books)
“Human Flight is impossible!” The New Yorker
"Man won't fly in a million years" -flies like 3 weeks later
“What if we lived in Harrison Bergeron’s dystopia”
holy shit bro, i just read the plot in wikipedia, this is the most horrible
distopy that I've heard of
@@herickferraz4850 yeaaaah. The story is one of the few I actually enjoyed from school. I think it’s so interesting and I’d love to see a big channel talk about it.
I imagine it a mix of Stalinist Soviet Union and Nazi Germany
@@thatgaming1940 nah it’s worse, they forcefully handicap their own citizens to make everyone “equal.” It all happened through amendments to the constitution
This is the dumbest fucking short story I ever read in school. I fucking hated it because it's just a really really fucking dumb analogy to various equality movements and communism without fucking understanding either. First off, movements like the disability access ones aren't fucking about making people worse to be "on our level", it's to make fucking living easier. Also communism isn't about equalizing people. The main quote Marx is known for is "Each according to his need. Each according to his ability". This is a naked admission of the lack of perfect equality under the various forms of socialism. Some people need more and some people have to give more as everyone is different. Thanks for reminding of the name of this short story cause it keeps coming to me as a memory and then I start thinking madly about it. I looked up when it was published and of course it was in the late-60s, so weird scare-mongering about the civil rights movement and Soviet communism.
On my final note, I want to personally go to your house and hit you over the head with a rolled up newspaper as it makes a soft "plonk" noise for reminding me of something from middle school English class I thought was monumentally stupid
“If an elderly but distinguished scientist says that something is possible, he is almost certainly right; but if he says that it is impossible, he is very probably wrong.”
If I can’t chat with darling over five thousand light years with cute holograms and warm kisses then you can’t either.
Another Tyler video, time to warm up the rabbit hole.
beastiality isnt okay
@@dominicduncan9895 it’s ok, they’re a rabbit
Ah, yes. The hole of a warm rabbit.
@@canadaball603 ive never read the bible but i dont think jesus was a rabbit
So does he voice half as interesting??? The RUclips channel about bricks 🧱? Just curious
Why does he sound like he's about to burp at any point?
r/rareinsults
Holograms are preventable if you just remind her to take her osteoporosis medicine.
This took me a few seconds. Good one!
@@crackpotpolitics5986 I don’t get the joke 🥲
@@shinysphinx8849 holograms = hollow grams (grandma). Osteoporosis is a common condition in elderly women that causes the bones to be hollower than they should be
@@shinysphinx8849 the joke is holograms sounds like Hollow Grams. Osteoporosis makes your bones hollow so to stop Grams from becoming hollow she needs her meds
😑
My favorite easter egg in gaming is in Halo 4, when you place a hologram on top of a corpse, the hologram tbags on it. Brilliant!
We don't need holodecks when we have VR.
Yeah, eventually we will all have computers implanted into our brains so we won't even need extra hardware.
@Ascetic_one I know, right?
@Ascetic_one I mean that is where technology is heading, and frankly I'm excited for it
@@theFLCLguy implants are a huge hassle, though
More like AR.
I really like the idea used in the 2002 movie "The Time Machine" where Orlando Jones' character was a hologram that was projected onto a series of glass panels in the middle of the room. I noticed you never mentioned it in this video, but I was really wandering if that sort of technology might be possible someday.
That can only work against one viewer's eyes. See the scene from Mission Impossible Ghost Protocol.
Another way to make something like a hologram is by using drones with lights on them and programming them to fly around(this is already a thing). However, the drones we have right now are way too big and way too loud to use as a good replacement for ordinary screens to put inside any room.
@MitchTheYoshi No idea my guy, I only know he's in spiderman far from home and I haven't seen the movie yet
@@NYLEVEN He uses drones to project fake monsters that he can then defeat
@@NYLEVEN he uses drones and litteral magic
@MitchTheYoshi smoke and mirrors get the job done
@MitchTheYoshi I just watched far from home and it's similar but not really because what I meant wasn't projecting light onto air but literally attaching a really smal led to a really smal and quiet drone and then programming both the drone and the light to display a 3d image or video. If you look up "drone light show" you can see what I mean but then imagine it with hundreds or thousands of tiny little drones quietly flying around in a living room.
Gatebox and their 6.6 foot anime hologram will be as out of date as black/white TVs are today in the future when we can physically nail an anime hologram.
All the ways I see free floating volumetric displays working mostly revolves around things like ferromagnets, where you are using massive particles rather than massless particles forming your display. Functionally, this can be identical. If you want the cool translucent look, that isn’t too hard. It’s even cooler because you can actually touch it!
I think vapor/mist displays with multiple proyectors to get a somewhat tridimensional image are also possible: you would get the misty or cloudy look.
We would probably need new physical principles that we currently ignore to get something beyond that.
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fog_display
@@ZetaFuzzMachine It's maybe extremely difficult. The way I imagine it is having something like pixels... Or voxels in this case I guess. You would have arbitrarily small magnets which each correspond to ferromagnetic particles. You turn the magnet on and off to different strengths to move it farther up and down across the display. This way, you get both horizontal and vertical movement without making complex magnetic fields.
But I don't know if this works. While it may, you would have to be really careful to not get interference between each individual magnet and ferromagnet pair. Most likely, this means using superconductors which is possible, but it creates a practical maximum resolution and isn't really feasible right now.
And that's my nerd speech :)
@@Isometrix116 what if it malfunctions and stabs you like a T-3000?
4:40 - In the landmark cyberpunk novel Neuromancer, there's a character who uses hyper-realistic laser holograms like Mysterio in Spider-Man: Far From Home. He usually uses them as illusions / distractions, but at one point, he uses them *offensively* to blind an attacker
They already explained this in the Clerks cartoon. Remember when they asked how a lightsaber knows when to stop? The Force.
But lightsabers aren't made of light. They're made out of plasma
@@Clay3613 yeah it can also be controlled with a magnetic field
@@mifigor1935 wrong, it's space magic. don't try to make scientific sense out of star wars, it's pure fantasy
@@salsamancer you're fantasy
@@bruno_kunda Because it's fun. Don't see the problem in people wanting to make scientific sense out of inherently fictional worlds. That's why there are so many books in the Star Wars lore that people like reading including myself, it's just the fun of getting invested in a science fiction world. Sure it's dorky and pointless, but no need to negatively view it.
This guy sounds like he had 5 minutes to prepare for the video and now has to make a presentation about it
I like how this channel went from geography facts, to general knowledge about history, to just general knowledge, to making weird crap, to actual science facts.
I wonder what will come next?
It started out as Geography Hub
@@thatguy3421 oh yeah I forgot, thanks for reminding me!
I guess next will be reading scientific papers, them to something absolutely and completely different.
Like.. fursuit reviews or phone drop tests or something? 🤣🤣
@@Litepaw I would pay actual money to see him review fursuits
Yep
I kind of feel like it is a good safety precaution to keep holograms encased in glass anyway. Otherwise it could be weaponized, blurring the line between reality and fantasy, or simply obscuring peoples view. Besides, you can already do a lot of interesting things with augmented reality anyways, which ethically gates volumetric imagery: you can't be exposed to them without giving consent in the form of putting on glasses, lenses (or cybernetic eyes).
This explains so much about Bikini Bottom's technology level lol
I remember in middle school there was some assembly about drunk driving etc. and they had 2 spotlights on opposite sides of the gym, one behind all the kids on the bleachers, and one next to the fat guy telling us that beer is bad. The 2 spotlights were angled directly at each other and at some points in the show, created holograms like cubes spinning around. Maybe it doesn't quite count because some viewing angles of that image would block out the spotlights, but from the oblong angle I saw it from, it really was a hologram, even if they used a lil fog machine and low light in the gym to make it more visible.
Honestly, I'm ok with those kinds of displays only being available through the use of AR technology.
You'd be able to opt out of all that digital noise by simply taking off your goggles or whatever future device they use to access those technologies.
Agreed. I'd love to see stuff like that, but I'd also want to always be able to take the glasses off and "opt out".
The future device is going to be a chip in your head
@@eziospaghettiauditore8369 Highly doubt it. Much cheaper to mass produce and distribute headsets or other small devices than something that requires surgery.
@@eziospaghettiauditore8369 I think it's much more likely that we'll use headsets that will be closer to normal glasses
What has never made sense to me is how Tony Stark and other characters are able to interact with holograms as if they’re in the real world.
I liked the part where Marty, Luke and, Obi wan all had their eyes seared out and fucking died.
And then Luke and Obi Wan got fucking gassed
The hologram projector on the ceiling of K's apartment in Blade Runner 2049 (Joi), is the most realistic looking technology that could happen in real life in the future.
I have a new second channel where I talk about game related stuff ruclips.net/user/Whimsu
Now it makes sense. You moved your gaming news to your second channel.
Down the rabbit hole.
You deserve a million subs already, damn it
honestly, AR contact lenses is where we will see the this stuff overlap with scifi. as then the tech will be so small it will be un noticable
In the future it will be awesome to replaces my current glasses with AR glasses (with the correct lens), where the technology can fit into my glass frames. If not I can always undergo eye surgery.
Holograms are impossible because even if you manage to stop light in place it wouldn't be visible since the light isn't even reaching your eyes. I think the only way to see holograms like in the media would be to litteraly project accurate 3d images directly into your eyes that would react and move accordingly to your perspective, maybe when we are able to throw light into our eyes in a manageable way we could do some badass shit like hograms and irl HUDs
Wait did anyone ever thought about shit like this? I never saw anything about projecting images into our eyes holy shit I'ma go down some rabbit hole rn brb
INTRODUCTION: The Virtual Retinal Display (VRD) is a new technology for creating visual images. It was developed at the Human Interface Technology Laboratory (HIT Lab) by Dr. Thomas A. Furness III. The VRD creates images by scanning low power laser light directly onto the retina. This special method results in images that are bright, high contrast and high resolution. In this paper, we describe how the VRD functions, the special consequences of its mechanism of action and potential medical applications of the VRD, including surgical displays and displays for people with low vision. A description of its safety analysis will also be included. In one set of tests we had a number of patients with partial loss of vision view images with the VRD. There were two groups of subjects: patients with macular degeneration, a degenerative disease of the retina and patients with keratoconus. Typical VRD images are on the order of 300 nanowatts. VRD images are also readily viewed superimposed on ambient room light. In our low vision test subjects, 5 out of 8 subjects with macular degeneration felt the VRD images were better and brighter than the CRT or paper images and they were able to reach the same or better level of resolution. All patients with Keratoconus were able to resolve lines of test several lines smaller with the VRD than with their own correction. Further, they all felt that the VRD images were sharper and easier to view. The VRD is a safe new display technology.
Holy shit, how did no one made some cool AR goggles or holograms yet
I'm cool with Holo Lens if it means i won't burn my retinas. Now we just gotta figure out how to create artificial stimulus (stuff like touch and taste).
Louis sussy baka
I dont think the other senses will get involved so easily, sadly. Ever heard of smell-o-vision? It flopped way, way back somewhere in the 20th century cant remember when, but I think it was actually pretty early.
@@Warvell1 The problem with past forms of smell-o-vision is that it's not artificial stimulus. The smell is real and has to be dispensed by a machine that you have to keep filled. I'm not 100% sure about smell but I know there's been modern progress on artificial taste. Of course all the senses would be solvable if we replaced the physical screen with a direct brain interface.
Let's focus on touch first
Id see if you can use electrical stimulus on the tongue. But it would require a tongue sleeve and a wire until batteries become advanced enough.
I searched this after the apple vision pro release, what a time to be alive!
I've got a feeling that he's going to tell me that lightsabers are not possible in his next video. Boo hoo, my childhood is ruined.
Didn't Disney already do that?
hacksmith made a proto-saber. Like that real.
@@capnsteele3365 looks like a beefed up bunsen burner lol
@@genericgorilla thats the best they could do without creating a black hole due to the fact that lightsabers don't exist
@@genericgorilla ye that thing is just an industrial blowtorch
4:56
Obi Wan: "Luke" echoed voice
Luke: "Yeah" echoed voice
Obi Wan: "DO YOU WANT TO FEEL THE FORCE?" volume intensifies
The idea of R2D2 supercooling a room to near absolute zero simultaneously freezing Obi-Wan and Luke while burning their retinas out just to display a hologram was a hilarious mental image
4:46 didn’t know that I NEEDED to see that frame-by-frame
XD
Star wars isn't sci-fi though, it's a space fantasy.
I always thought of it as science-fantasy. When 'science' is used to explain what is essentially magic.
It's science fiction and fantasy. All George Lucas did was take fantasy tropes and place them in a sci fi setting. So it's both, Science Fiction and Fantasy.
It’s Dune fanfiction
I love your editing man, it’s so good
You have destroyed my childhood dreams in less than 9 minutes.
No not necessarily, you just have to alter them slightly and imagine them all wearing glasses. For Halo they have chips in thier brains, they don't count.
The comments break down into "of course, physics"
and
"I didn't watch the video but it's totally wrong age aged like milk but I say aged like fine wine because I don't understand metaphors and I only read the headline and didn't watch the explanation but know it's wrong because I saw an article about how holograms are real. .. I also didn't read the article just the headline."
and my favorite
"what if you take one technology that isn't practical and make it impossibly small and even more impractical and create something that is kinda like hologramish but isn't and is totally not practical and I will only imagine it and expect others to do the work."
why does tyler sound like he’s drunk or is it just me
LiigHt waæves
You know what’s insane to me, is a movie about god damn magicians came up with the most attainable version of a sci fi hologram yet. The movie is called “now you see me”, and towards the beginning, it features a hologram comprised of filling a room with fog, and having multiple projectors in multiple places around the room all project toward a single point, where it catches the fog and makes it appear 3d
Yeah I realized that the much more realistic future is almost certainly going to be everyone wearing AR glasses (or contacts or bionics) and the holograms would be something seen through those. One of those virtual worlds overlaid on top of the real one that you access via your AR tech of choice, which is still a cool idea
"With even apple jumping into it"
They sure fuckin did
This is purely science fiction, but I feel like if there was some sort of energy that could trap/isolate/manipulate photons, you could probably create a sort of "interactive light" that can be programmed to any sort of configuration that can be touched/manipulated by hand, just like in the movies, without any of the mentioned negative side effects.
We do have holograms - sort of. It's an interesting phenomenon that occurs when you put an object inside two mirrored bowls (it's called a mirascope). What I would really like to see is what happens if you put a lens on top of a mirascope and if a mirascope could work with a volumetric display inside. If you could craft the lens to make a projection appear larger than the actual object and the output of the display would work, you could theoretically craft a (mostly) working hologram (Mirascopes are directional, unlike an actual hologram) and I suspect that you cannot put a lens over the mirascope without breaking the illusion, or at lease causing distortion.
Now we have drone shows, where every vertex of a 3D model is represented as a light-emitting drone. If in the future those could be miniaturized to mosquito size, then...
Then it still won't be a hologram and really impractical
@@laartwork
What if it was a swarm of nanotech drones that live in a matchbox-sized device and they work as part of a redundancy matrix. On the user end it's as simple as opening the matchbox to unleash the bots and closing it to return them home
Does this mean I can’t watch whatever the hell that little holographic circus performance was in the Star Wars holiday special?
"holograms cant exist, these multiple examples of holograms dont count"
I thought the same thing initially. He's redefining the word so that some of these examples lay outside of his set of parameters. But he's actually correct within the context of the specific type of hologram he'd talking about. For now anyways.
Tbh if you tell the kid you that those are the holograms he'll get tin the future, he'll say those don't count too
Because those examples work differently than the way media portrays them.
Throughout media it usually works like a projector except casting a 3D image. You should be able to put your hand through it which a volumetric display that we have irl wouldn't allow.
AR like the Hololens probably fits the bill the best even if it technically isn't displaying in reality.
Maybe a better way to say it is "holograms are pretty cool, but they're NOT like in the movies".
Also, the technology of actual holograms has been pretty stagnant since the 1980s or so. I remember when they were suddenly everywhere--since then they've been relegated mostly to cheap trinkets and anti-counterfeiting gadgets.
(I think the problem here is that holography got developed to a moderately high level as an *analog* technology, but the crazy development in communication and entertainment tech since then was all digital. Computer-generated holograms are possible and have been made, but the tech just hasn't gotten very far, and genuinely holographic real-time computer displays still seem to be impractical. All modern attempts to do a 3D or volumetric display use some other technology.)
The military is looking into the Microsoft lens thing so the first people to use holograms will be the kids with 1.2 gpas
Was anxious to comment with a link to the BYU tech video while watching, and then you showed it. Nice work. Very thorough.
It's cool to me that a local university is working on this.
really? because I found that terrifying, the potential uses for hologram technology will all be tyrannical in reality. Innovation is a military thing first, entertainment 2nd.
@@gottaproxy8826... okay. Obviously you're imagining the military using some Sci fi holograms, which would be very useful -
but there are hard physics resisting making something truly like our sci fi dreams.
I don't see the military using holograms any time soon.
They're easily possible. We already have AR glasses, contacts can't be far behind. When they become ubiquitous, we'll have holograms everywhere
100 Years Ago: “This is why we will never have heart transplants.”
Idea: we make a volumetric display on the super ball field that can pop out of the ground at half time then animate and project the entire ending of the band geeks episode
Even with AR though there are VR mixed reality headsets that are affordable to the average middle class consumer that also do AR as well. Granted it isn't as good and also currently requires being tethered to a PC, but even on the consumer level the technology is there
Quest 2 can do basic AR and is fairly cheap and wireless.
Lighting engineer. We are close to finishing a hologram project.
Imagine every ceiling light at a retail store being connected in a mesh network, and each having a hologram projector.
The goal is to have something like a virtual assistant that you could interact with using an app.
Dammit someone get me a Focus from Horizon Zero Dawn NOW
I'm playing that right now. Tech and magic are indistinguishable from one another eh?
They really should add a touchscreen display to the AirPods case and turn it into an iPod. They should probably add a clip as well because for most people it turns into pocket clutter, apple should intend for users to clip the case to their clothing.
Introducing Apple vision pro 😂
Once you hear his voice as Kermit it can't be unheard.
Holograms? More like Bore Ragnarok
I tried to explain hologram science to those Apple store employees. They didn´t understand where I was coming from, I regretted wasting my time.
How did you manage to spend 8 minutes talking about holograms without once mentioning holodecks?
Another fun fact: when first subway project in 19th century was presented to public, well-known scientists of that time said, what subway train, running on crazy speed of 25 km/hr will displace all air from tunnels and all passengers will suffocate. So never say something is impossible. You should say " i think, this, possibly, impossible with currently available level of technology" instead.
I’m going to call this series “The Future is Impossible”.
Title: Why Holograms Are Impossible (Mostly)
Me: Makes a hologram.
KnowledgeHub: Impossible!
"Humanity won't fly for a million years"
Wevalways knew flight was possible because we have seen birds do it. No one said never in a million years. What we don't see is light stopping. It is impractical and can be done in AR so that's how it will be done.
Man this so reminds me of a argument I had with someone about 9/11. They insisted on telling me that the planes that hit the towers were actually a hologram. This led to me explaining how a hologram actually works and how photo realistic projection wasn't even possible at that time. Not surprising they were just a baby when it happened while I had just completed basic training in the Army. Our technology does have its limitations, but explaining this to younger people whose experience with tech comes from using a smartphone, is like pulling teeth. They really need to teach more Physics in the schools so more people understand that you can't just break the laws of Physics no matter how much time passes.
The only way i see holograms like we see in movies happening is through th nanotechnology... Think of them as tiny tiny drones we can manipulate/instruct using *SOME* form of tech...
Nanotech drones have enormous potential.
Dang, all i wanted was to be fixed by bladerunner joi but now its seems like a distant dream
Your the only person I know who talks like an idiot and genius at the same time (I think this is a compliment)
I would also include Mr Plinkett
Denno Coil is an anime that I think has the best possible depiction of future AR tech. they use glasses that overlay the AR world on the real world, that are hooked up to mobile phones.
anyone else seeing this after apple vision pro releases
That's VR... not even AR. Apple just don't what Meta did only way more expensive
I didn’t know Bill Cosby was so knowledgeable on light
Doesn't matter. There is no advantage to the "real" holograms over them being generated through Augmented Reality. Hopefully we get sensible glasses soon.
Out of curiosity, what would be the purpose of either, in your opinion?
@@michaelbalfour3170 Being cool.
@@WaluigiPooper666 Ye but 3d was "cool", it disappeared quickly enough.
@@michaelbalfour3170 3D ar displays are useful since they can act as displays without the need of the real physical display. You can have signs, TVs, clocks, everything shown through AR without the need of real things. You can also project these holograms to create objects, lets say you are a car designer, having a manifestation of your work would be very helpful
@@JoshBlueMoon5 I wasn't talking about AR.
The closest we'll ever get to holograms are digital versions of whatever you need as long as you're wearing the proper headset. Maybe around the size of goggles of we can miniaturize it enough
I don't see it working for some form of contact lense like in some sci fi media but I'd love to be proven wrong.
Me crying because I won’t be able to marry hologram Miku in the future 😔👍
Time to go back to manipulating real women instead of light like the good Lord intended.
There was a time when blue led was impossible. I know completely different problem but still i dont believe technology will remain same after 100 years
Ar glasses: 3 500 dollars
Me with my 50 dollars 2ds: pathetic
Well, we might not be eating the holographic meatloaf, but with VR/AR, we can certainly cook it...virtually...in a simulation...you get the idea.
Here we go 😂
Forgot to mention the 3d mist projectors? Used in semi dark rooms and project a mostly invisible mist(not water, it was some kind of liquid that made real tiny droplets) down into an enclosed space and light hits the mist from all around. Can't find the link for the one I remember though. It created 3d images you can view from different angles.
AR honestly seems way cooler than holograms to me. Being able to alter the way you perceive the world around you with a settings menu like in a game would be absolutely life changing
A hologram is not just a 3D image. It is an interference pattern created by 2 beams of coherent light. Not all holograms are 3D.
i'll edit this comment in 15 years if this ages terribly
It won't age terribly
hoping that this will eventually be on poorlyagedthings twitter account
No they are not, you just lack imagination. Imagine nanodrones able to fly around and form themselves into complex shapes or images you then have a functional Hologram.
Nanodrones are also imposible
@@b.o.j.1442 So you really believe that it's impossible to put an LED on a small flying platform and have them communicate in unison to display images/ information? Because I just explained EXACTLY how to accomplish the very same concept but only maybe a bit more macroscopic but does that bring it anymore into the realm of reality than a "Nanoscale" flying platform? Both are equally plausible, it's just one is larger... Slightly.
Still not a hologram.
I imagine a sci-fi hologram using another piece of sci-fi tech: nanobots, which I remember hearing actually exist but I'm not sure. If they do exist, they're nowhere near advanced enough yet, but it's not hard to imagine a "projector" just dispensing a flying swarm of them to a designated area, before the nanobots light up as the display.
The batteries would suck even if they're firefly sized, but they could constantly fly in and out of the "projector." The hard part there would be fitting all of that coordination code on them, but maybe magnets could interface with the projector? I'll let a smart person figure that out
By the time we could create nano-bot swarms, we no doubt could also charge such tiny devices with electromagnetic fields.
Actually no. Real holograms where recently invented. They are very basic at this point, only one particle can be controlled in 3d space. They are using lazers to control the position of a particle then hitting it with another lazer of whatever color is wanted. Basically we have one pixel holograms at this point.
5:20 He talks about exactly this technology in the video.
@@fastmovingvolcanomatter Right. But this technology will be improved on. Giveing way to better ways to make holograms. To say holograms are impossible is just stupid lol.
I like to imagine that Kermit is the one that's teaching me.
frankly i personally think my lizards will be the ultimate replacement to this technology, they just go in your head and bite your brain so you imagine the hologram