Halos: Difference between revisions

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[[File:Halos.png|thumb|right|The ''Halos'' application.]]
[[File:Halos.png|thumb|right|The ''Halos'' application.]]
'''Halos''' is the name of a demonstration application first presented by [[Microsoft]] during the [[Windows Hardware Engineering Conference 2005|Windows Hardware Engineering Conference of 2005]] (WinHEC 2005).<ref>Wilson, Derk; Walton, Jarred. (April 29, 2005). [http://www.anandtech.com/show/1670 "WinHEC 2005: Coverage Wrap"]</ref> The application used the Windows Presentation Foundation (codenamed ''Avalon'') to rotate multiple two-dimensional images in three-dimensional space across a screen, and was also shown during the [[Professional Developers Conference of 2005|Professional Developers Conference]] in 2005.<ref>Thurrott, Paul. [http://winsupersite.com/product-review/pdc-2005-photo-gallery-build-5219-features-day-0 "PDC 2005 Photo Gallery: Build 5219 features (Day 0)"]</ref>
'''Halos''' is the name of a demonstration application first presented by [[Microsoft]] during the [[Windows Hardware Engineering Conference 2005|Windows Hardware Engineering Conference of 2005]] (WinHEC 2005).<ref>Wilson, Derek; Walton, Jarred. (April 29, 2005). [http://www.anandtech.com/show/1670 "WinHEC 2005: Coverage Wrap"]</ref> The application used the Windows Presentation Foundation (codenamed ''Avalon'') to rotate multiple two-dimensional images in three-dimensional space across a screen, and was also shown during the [[Professional Developers Conference of 2005|Professional Developers Conference]] in 2005.<ref>Thurrott, Paul. [http://winsupersite.com/product-review/pdc-2005-photo-gallery-build-5219-features-day-0 "PDC 2005 Photo Gallery: Build 5219 features (Day 0)"]</ref>


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 22:06, 28 October 2014

The Halos application.

Halos is the name of a demonstration application first presented by Microsoft during the Windows Hardware Engineering Conference of 2005 (WinHEC 2005).[1] The application used the Windows Presentation Foundation (codenamed Avalon) to rotate multiple two-dimensional images in three-dimensional space across a screen, and was also shown during the Professional Developers Conference in 2005.[2]

See also

References

  1. Wilson, Derek; Walton, Jarred. (April 29, 2005). "WinHEC 2005: Coverage Wrap"
  2. Thurrott, Paul. "PDC 2005 Photo Gallery: Build 5219 features (Day 0)"