This is only a matter of time. We have already seen digital graffiti in art museums. Exhibitors all over the world have already taken action. According to Xiaobian, the Dutch National Museum of Antiquities will begin using the Microsoft Hololens headlines to provide visitors with augmented reality exhibitions. More importantly, AR headlines can be used to display antiques that cannot be exhibited publicly.
Due to space and some of the conditions of antiquities, museums in the city of Leiden on the west coast of the Netherlands can only exhibit about 20% of their collections. But with HoloLens, the Dutch National Museum of Cultural Heritage hopes to allow visitors to visit more collections in digital form.
In addition, the museum can also customize the display of the day, or enhance the existing exhibition. The National Museum of National Heritage in the Netherlands is currently building an Egyptian-themed Teffeh Temple, where all the relevant digital artifacts are placed. Although this is an exhibition several decades ago, it still creates a sense of being in an ancient temple.
Other features that enhance the experience of visiting the museum include presenting more information in the user's field of vision; navigation, and directing visitors to visit specific areas of the museum. Such features can be extended to make it easier for tourists to obtain navigational paths and information and to master the museum in all aspects.
Although the project is still in its infancy, the Dutch National Heritage Museum hopes to expand the project in the future and provide viewers with more content. They also believe that such hardware may one day become ubiquitous and at the same time be able to rent out to tourists just as the museum now rents audio guides.
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