Guernsey Press

Microsoft wins major deal making headsets for US Army

The technology is based on Microsoft’s HoloLens headsets, which were originally intended for gaming and entertainment.

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Microsoft won a nearly 22 billion dollar (£16 billion) contract to supply US Army combat troops with its augmented reality headsets.

Microsoft and the Army separately announced the deal Wednesday.

The technology is based on Microsoft’s HoloLens headsets, which were originally intended for the video game and entertainment industries.

Pentagon officials have described the futuristic technology — which the Army calls its Integrated Visual Augmentation System — as a way of boosting soldiers’ awareness of their surroundings and their ability to spot targets and dangers.

Microsoft’s head-mounted HoloLens displays let people see virtual imagery superimposed over the physical world in front of them — anything from holograms in virtual game worlds to repair instructions floating over a broken gadget. Users can control what they see using hand gestures or voice commands.

Microsoft Army Headsets
The Microsoft deal is worth $22 billion (Courtney Bacon/U.S. Army via AP)

The Army first began testing Microsoft’s system with a 480 million dollar (£348 million) contract in 2018 and said the headsets could be used for both training and in actual battle.

The new contract will enable Microsoft to mass produce units for more than 120,000 soldiers in the Army Close Combat Force. Microsoft said the contract would amount to up to 21.88 billion dollars over the next decade, with a five-year base agreement that can be extended for another five years.

It was not clear how it corresponds to the 740 billion dollar (£537 billion) defence policy bill Congress passed in January after overriding a veto by President Donald Trump. The bill affirmed a 3% pay raise for US troops but included cuts to the headset initiative.

Microsoft Army Headsets
Members of a design team at Cirque du Soleil demonstrate the use of Microsoft’s HoloLens device in helping to virtually design a set (Elaine Thompson/AP)

A group of Microsoft workers in 2019 petitioned the company to cancel its initial Army deal, arguing it would turn real-world battlefields into a video game.

Microsoft is among several tech companies that have sought to wow the gaming world with glitzy new virtual reality goggles over the past decade, though the efforts have largely fizzled.

The company pivoted away from consumer applications for its second-generation HoloLens 2, introduced in 2019, which is the basis for the Army’s new gadgets.

Although Microsoft recently demonstrated a way to use the goggles to play the hit game Pokemon Go, it mostly pitches the devices as work tools to help surgeons, factory crews and others.

The headset deal is part of Microsoft’s broader work as a defence contractor. The Pentagon in September reaffirmed Microsoft as winner of a cloud computing contract potentially worth 10 billion dollar (£7.26 billion), although the work has been delayed by a legal battle over rival Amazon’s claim that the bidding process was flawed.

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