Augmented reality, or augmented warfare?

Enrique Dans
Enrique Dans
Published in
2 min readJan 14, 2023

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IMAGE: A soldier wearing an adapted Microsoft HoloLens augmented reality device
IMAGE: US Army (CC0)

The U.S. Congress has rejected a request for an Army contract to procure 6,900 modified and adapted units of Microsoft’s HoloLens, following a 2018 $480 million contract that saw the Army get an initial 5,000 units of the device and a further 120,000 over the course of the coming decade.

Feedback from internal evaluations by 1,000 soldiers during more than 100,000 hours of training highlighted complaints of headaches, nausea and eye fatigue that could affect their ability to complete a mission. In addition, there appeared to be problems related to the light emitted by the front display of the visors, which could result in enemy troops being able to locate soldiers wearing them.

In 2018, when the first contract was announced, the Army claimed that the visors could contribute to “increased lethality, mobility and situational awareness needed to achieve overmatch against current and future adversaries,” a group of 50 Microsoft employees went so far as to write a letter of protest to its CEO, Satya Nadella, and its president, Brad Smith saying they “refused to develop technologies for war and oppression,” and demanding that the company’s management rescind the contract, which obviously did not happen.

Now, the Army has cut back on its intentions to continue equipping its soldiers with augmented reality devices of this type, but…

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Enrique Dans
Enrique Dans

Professor of Innovation at IE Business School and blogger (in English here and in Spanish at enriquedans.com)