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        Collaboration Capabilities come to Microsoft Dynamics 365 Guides for HoloLens 2
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
 - December 16, 2022
 
		
        
 Microsoft's Dynamics 365 Guides add-on to HoloLens 2 is getting new enhancements, the company announced this week.
The Microsoft Dynamics  365 Guides add-on is used to provide step-by-step instructions to workers via  3-D models. This Guides add-on is now combined with the Microsoft  Dynamics 365 Remote Assist add-on, which is used for worker collaborations  involving shared views. 
The latest Dynamics  365 Guides release "combines these two mixed reality apps [Guides and  Remote Assist] into a single seamless experience," Microsoft's announcement  stated. 
Microsoft still presently sells Guides and Remote Assist  as separate add-ons. The possible licensing implications of the Guides enhancement  weren't described.
Toyota  Collaboration
Microsoft indicated in another  announcement that it combined the Guides and Remote Assist functions for  HoloLens 2 at the request of car manufacturer Toyota. The combination improves Toyota's  collaborations and training efforts.
"Someone can grab a HoloLens, start a Guides  session, and literally have a trainer in their head," said David Kleiner  of Toyota Motor North America's Applied Technology Research Lab, as cited by  Microsoft. "If they do need help, they can call an expert right from the  app."
Microsoft Dynamics 365 Guides users also have access to  Teams for messaging, OneDrive for document storage and calendar items,  Microsoft explained, regarding the enhancement. Those capabilities are part of the  general improvements arriving with latest add-on updates.
"Microsoft's latest wave of updates is combining its  key Dynamics 365 Mixed Reality Apps and adding Microsoft Teams and OneDrive to  existing integrations with Azure and Power Platform," Microsoft explained.
Six U.S. Toyota Logistics Centers are using HoloLens 2  for training and collaborations, and there are plans for rollouts to the car  company's Canada and Mexico centers as well, Microsoft's announcement  indicated.  
Other Industrial  Metaverse Collaborations
Another organization using Microsoft's mixed-reality  solutions is the U.S. Department of Labor's Occupational Safety and Health  Administration. It uses an immersive graphics app built by Clirio to train  people on safe trench-digging scenarios. 
Hokkaido Electric Power Company is using HoloLens 2 and  Dynamics 365 Remote Assist with a custom-built app to inspect thermal power  plant equipment. 
Microsoft also described the U.S. Army as a customer that  is helping to shape its mixed-reality efforts, although the details weren't elucidated. 
Overall, Microsoft described these improvements as being  part of its "industrial metaverse" work, where organizations work  with 3-D representations of physical objects or they graphically build "digital  twins" of industrial or outdoor spaces. 
Most of Microsoft's publicized metaverse work so far seems  to fall in the industrial category. For a general outline of Microsoft's metaverse  concepts, see this ESJ.com article.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.