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Neural Notes: How I became an AI hologram

In this weekโ€™s Neural Notes, Tegan gets turned into an AI hologram by Proto in Las Vegas and philosophises over the meaning of โ€˜presenceโ€™ in a digital cloning future.
Tegan Jones
Tegan Jones
proto hologram AI
Deputy Editor Tegan Jones (centre) gets turned into a hologram with Proto technology. Source: SmartCompany

Welcome back to Neural Notes, where I look at some of the most interesting AI news of the week. In this edition: Iโ€™m turned into a holographic clone in Las Vegas by Proto, and the companyโ€™s AI officer explains why this technology is going to be huge for the retail market.

You really canโ€™t miss Protoโ€™s holographic boxes, even during a packed event like AWSโ€™ re:Invent. They stand taller than an NBA player (though there are mini desk-sized versions) and from the inside, holographic clones are chatting amongst themselves and waving at the crowd.

Unfortunately for me, I had seen this technology before. It was featured in an episode of The Kardashians earlier this year.

Protoโ€™s chief product and AI officer Raffi Kryszek seemed surprised that I knew about the tech. Iโ€™m guessing his previous interviewers that day werenโ€™t as tragic as me. 

Protoโ€™s devices create life-sized, three-dimensional representations of people and objects. The idea is to enable โ€˜immersiveโ€™ communication without the need for wearables such as VR headsets or AR glasses.

Using a bespoke operating system, the platform powers applications ranging from real-time telepresence to AI-driven holographic interactions. 

According to Kryszek, a standard setup captures a personโ€™s voice, gestures, and likeness in about three minutes. From there, it creates a hologram that can be deployed for live or autonomous use cases.

My experience was much shorter this because it didnโ€™t need to AI-generate words and movement like in the real-world Proto boxes.

For the short hologram clip of yours truly, Proto only required me to do some form of movement for about 5-10 seconds. This was then replicated in its holographic box.

While this was a comparatively simpler task, it was still absolutely wild to witness firsthand.

Proto hologramโ€™s paradox of presence

Unsurprisingly, corporate environments have been one of Protoโ€™s primary use cases.

โ€œIt started out mostly with executives wanting to communicate with other executives and other team members around the world,โ€ Kryszek said to SmartCompany

Protoโ€™s technology promises to recreate a sense of physical presence, making remote communication feel more personal and impactful than a typical video call.

โ€œI feel like a Zoom call doesnโ€™t do the word โ€˜presenceโ€™ justice. Itโ€™s impersonal,โ€ Kryszek said.

He believes Protoโ€™s platform retains the nuances of in-person interactionsโ€”non-verbal cues, gestures, and a shared sense of space. 

However, the introduction of AI holographic twins โ€“ personas that can function autonomously โ€“ had me questioning whether replicating oneself for scalability conflicts with the very essence of presence.

Protoโ€™s holograms offer a way to multiply a leaderโ€™s or expertโ€™s influence without requiring them to be physically present. 

But if thatโ€™s the case, doesnโ€™t the entire concept of โ€˜presenceโ€™ become abstract when the interaction is powered by an AI-driven clone rather than the person themselves? 

That seems like the opposite of โ€˜personalโ€™ to me. 

According to Kryszek, this is a paradox that Protoโ€™s technology embraces. He envisions a future where Protoโ€™s hologram boxes can be used in real-time to enable, for example, a CEO to be โ€˜presentโ€™ in a meeting while across the other side of the world.

But he also sees the opportunity in the technology being used for more one-way communication that doesnโ€™t require the person to be there. For example, a talk or lecture.

The latency challenge

When it comes to the more real-time communication Proto offers, the biggest challenge is latency. This is something you could see on the show floor as the holograms โ€˜spokeโ€™ to each other.

For example, the two holograms on either side of โ€˜meโ€™ chatted in real time about SmartCompany based on some questions I answered before my likeness was captured.

It was undeniably impressive, but in its current iteration, the pauses between each speaker were noticeable, interrupting the natural flow of conversation.

โ€œUnder the hood of the technology, there are a lot of microservices. Each microservice โ€“  whether itโ€™s voice to text, text to speech, cloning and lip syncing, the real-time rendering โ€“ all of them have their own kind of inherent latency,โ€ Kryszek said.

Still, it was quite cool to see the other holograms talk about the โ€œsmart movesโ€ being made by SmartCompany while my clone took selfies and posed awkwardly.

Proto holograms in retail spaces

Another large use case for Protoโ€™s holograms has been in the retail space.

Clients are already using holographic displays for interactive digital signage, product demonstrations, and even AI-powered customer support.

According to Kryszek, this has been particularly useful for global brands that operate across markets are require multi-language assistance

Kryszek said this approach doesnโ€™t just create novelty, it solves real problems like scaling expertise and providing consistent customer experiences across different regions.

โ€œIf I make you into a holographic AI clone, I make you a product expert in the retail โ€” but itโ€™s also hyper localised in any language, and it sounds like you,โ€ Kryszek said.

โ€œFor example, in Southern California, where there are a lot of Spanish speakers, the hologram might respond in Spanish in real-time. Itโ€™s about accessibility and making sure every customer feels engaged.โ€

Celebrities are also getting in on the action. A Paris Hilston hologram has been โ€˜slivingโ€™ her way into Walmart to promote her range of cookware.

Kryszek also hinted at a major celebrity collaboration in 2025, but wasnโ€™t spilling the details on the record just yet. Youโ€™ll have to stay tuned for that one.

The author travelled to re:Invent in Las Vegas as a guest of AWS.