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Kongsberg Precision Cutting Systems places two-year order for XMReality Remote Guidance

About XMReality Remote Guidance™ XMReality Remote Guidance is an AR-enabled knowledge sharing tool that lets you communicate with gestures, speech, chat and pointers with someone at a completely different place. It includes: A unique hands-overlay technology that lets you guide someone else’s hands as if you were there. A web portal to manage teams and users, and to measure usage Integration through client-side API’s (Application Programming Interfaces) About XMReality AB (publ) XMReality develops and sells solutions that revolutionizes knowledge sharing through Augmented Reality (AR). The company is a market leader in Remote Guidance, which uses AR to guide onsite staff to enable quick dispositions, resolutions and/or problem prevention. The product is currently used in more than sixty countries. ABB, Nestlé, Electrolux, General Electric, AB Inbev, Sidel, Hexagon, Bühler and Minibea Intec are main customers out of more than sixty customers. With operations in Sweden a

XMReality Introduces Latest Remote Guidance Features, Including Full Web Support

Press release content from Business Wire. The AP news staff was not involved in its creation. XMReality Introduces Latest Remote Guidance Features, Including Full Web Support April 5, 2021 GMT PORTSMOUTH, N.H. (BUSINESS WIRE) Apr 5, 2021 XMReality today announced several significant features to its Remote Guidance solution, including a fully web-supported version of its Enterprise tier. ADVERTISEMENT The new Web Guide Station feature enables users seeking remote support to log in through a web browser without downloading and installing any software. It includes support for a key guiding feature, augmented reality Hands Overlay, the first such web-based solution in the market.

Supreme Court: Google s Reuse of Oracle s Java Computer Code Is Fair Use

(Photo by Alexander Pohl/NurPhoto via Getty Images) For over a decade, Google and Oracle have been fighting in court over whether the Android OS broke copyright law by using some computer code from Java. On Monday, the US Supreme Court finally ruled on the matter, and declared that Google’s use of the Java code was fair use.    The ruling is a win not just for Google, but also for software development in general. If the Supreme Court had sided with Oracle, the decision might have sparked a flood of lawsuits targeting apps and programs that have adopted snippets of computer code from other software products. 

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