| Maybe still a window for Vuzix in some military area? 
 Employees demand Microsoft cancels $479m HoloLens military contract.
 
 A group of Microsoft workers is campaigning for their employer to  cancel a contract that would see the US Army using HoloLens on the  battlefield.
 
 We previously reported that Microsoft  won the $479 million contract over competing bids from other firms such as Magic Leap to provide mixed reality headsets for the military.
 
 Now Microsoft Workers 4 Good, a group that started back in January, has  posted an open letter online to CEO Satya Nadella and president and chief legal officer Brad Smith, calling for the contact to be cancelled.
 
 The  group says it is "alarmed that Microsoft is working to provide weapons  technology to the US Military, helping one country's government  'increase lethality' using tools we built."
 
 The letter continues: "We did not sign up to develop weapons, and we demand a say in how our work is used."
 
 Microsoft  Workers 4 Good notes that many of the engineers who have helped develop  HoloLens before this contract was won believed the device would be used  for non-harmful means, including helping architects and other engineers  design buildings and cars, teaching everything from complex surgery to  playing the piano, and even hoping to "push the boundaries of gaming."
 
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 Instead,  it argues that HoloLens' use by the military is "designed to help  people kill", adding: "It will be deployed on the battlefield, and works  by turning warfare into a simulated video game, further distancing  soldiers from the grim stakes of way and the reality of bloodshed."
 
 The  group is demanding that the contract be cancelled, that any and all  weapons technologies in development are scrapped, that Microsoft makes a  public apology and calls for an "independent, external ethics board" to  judge acceptable use of Microsoft's technology.
 
 Over the weekend,  Microsoft unveiled HoloLens 2, with eye-tracking sensors and double the field of view. Microsoft Workers 4 Good noted  via Twitter  that the device was announced with a video showing medicine,  manufacturing and art, adding: "Not a single harmful use case. This is  what we should be supporting."
 
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