Holographic for Presentations
There are 7 billion people in this world, 14 billion ears to listen to a solid presentation, and if your idea is good enough, wouldn’t you want it to be presented to each and every one of those people?
With the way technology has progressed in the last 10 years, more and more people are getting on the internet, tuning in, and listening to presentations via Skype, YouTube, live streaming, or the like -but they’re not there or feeling the real live experience. It’s impossible to be everywhere at once, physically speaking, but what if we had the technology to project someone in multiple places at the same time?
With holographic solutions, we can stream a presenter live all over the globe. We could hold live events where a real presentation is happening by someone who might be thousands of miles away. We could host multicast streams of this idea in several locations at once. We could record the presentation, and play it for audiences -similar to the Michael Jackson performances after his passing.
Another great use for this technology is with the ability to have guest speakers from all over the globe. Giving a speech in San Francisco at a tech conference, and your guest speaker can’t make it? With holographic solutions, that guest can still take part in the presentation from anywhere in the world where there is data signal capabilities.
Is this the next evolutionary step in the speaker or guest? It might very well be so. There is, of course, a double edge to this sword. It would become less personable for no one to be physically on stage for an audience. I would suggest that it would best be utilized for bringing a guest on stage, without making them travel around the world if that came to it.