They’re making a “human interface,” and the ripple impact will go far past, say, improving good properties. Failing to understand people is a limiting factor for lots of of technologies we use right now. Just think about the robots and drones that people can only management if we translate what we wish into instructions they acknowledge. The truth is, when tech struggles to connect with us, it’s often because people—what they need, expect, or intend—are an enigma. One rising capability that differentiates spatial computing from its digital counterparts is engaging our senses. New applied sciences are letting engineers design experiences …