I think augmented reality has a lot of potential
in the kind of surgicals, for example.
If you walk into a current OR, you will see
there's a lot of consoles around, there to
look to our test screen and then do operations
on the patient and then look back and forth.
Imagine if you can project information on
top of the patient or say on a virtual wall
without having all this big screens so that's
I think something that's very exciting.
On the surface, they depend on large computer
graphics and visualization but in fact, it
is much more than that.
It is a convergence of artificial intelligence,
image analysis, computer graphics, of course,
and immersive communication.
