Life-sized 3D holograms allow loved ones to virtually share meal 400 miles apart
A pair of 67-year-old identical twins and an NHS doctor who has not seen her family were among the groups selected to take part.
Families and friends located 400 miles apart have been reunited virtually via live 3D holograms.
Virgin Media has opened a pair of dining pods for two days, one located in London and the other in Edinburgh, allowing people to eat with loved ones as though they are sat in the same room.
Life-sized 4K-quality holograms are projected on each end, using an array of cameras and lights arranged in a 360-degree cube.
The idea is to demonstrate how people could connect with others from afar in years to come, as broadband speeds improve and holograph-enabling gadgets eventually become more widely available.
Thursday and Friday’s Two Hearts Pizzeria experience is being geared towards those unable to physically visit each other during the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.
More than 30 people were selected to take part after applying earlier this year, which include a pair of 67-year-old identical twins who have been kept apart, shielding families who been unable to meet new members of the family, and an NHS doctor and her parents.
Gareth Lister, Virgin Media’s director of connectivity, told the PA news agency the network infrastructure is ready for such uses, as the gigabit rollout continues.
“The capability is there from a connectivity perspective, it’s going to be the products that sit on the end of it, and then the price of them, that will be what ultimately drives take-up, but a situation like Covid will accelerate it,” Mr Lister said.
Futurologist and tech forecaster James Bellini predicts that hologram technology will become commonplace in homes by 2030.
“Advancements in technology and lightning-speed broadband mean that pioneering forms of connectivity, such as holograms, are now viable options for when we want to feel closer to those we’re not physically able to be with,” he said.
“With technology moving as quickly as it is now, it wouldn’t be strange for holograms to be commonplace in UK households by the turn of the decade.”