Computerworld

Here's how Hololens could transform car buying

Microsoft's Hololens promises incredible ways to preview products

Microsoft's Hololens promises to merge the real and virtual worlds in ways that haven't been possible before, and on Thursday morning, the company demonstrated one way the gadget could transform the way we buy cars and just about any other major product.

The demonstration, which you can watch below, used a Caterpillar earth mover, but it's not difficult to see how this could be expanded to cars, houses, furniture, or a host of other goods.

It begins with a sales pamphlet -- the kind of thing you might pick up when shopping for a product. With a tablet PC pointed at the pamphlet, a 3D model of the machine sprang to life on screen, but the experience gets much cooler with Hololens.

160331 build caterpillar Microsoft/IDGNS

A 3D model is seen on a tablet PC during a keynote at the Microsoft Build conference in San Francisco on March 31, 2016.

Upon a click of the fingers, the 3D model appeared to jump off the page and onto the keynote floor, appearing in full size. Anyone wearing a Hololens -- and in the video you can view the experience -- can see walk around the earth mover and check out its components.

Because it's virtual, potential buyers can test out customizations and even look inside just by taking the somewhat unintuitive step of walking inside of the model.

Watch the demo here:

The Hololens was released to software developers on Wednesday, and Microsoft is using its Build conference to push the hardware. The company wants to get people thinking about what they could do with the gadget and start writing software.

Thursday's event was one of several glimpses Microsoft provided this week into the possibilities of Hololens. On Wednesday, it showed off a virtual holographic desk -- a physical desk with space for holographic images.

PC World's Mark Hachman had an exclusive early look at Hololens. Here are his first impressions: