The use of these endlessly flexible 3D images is increasing rapidly.
Not just in entertainment, but in medicine, education, design, defence and more.
Holograms trick the brain into seeing something in 3D when it’s really just a projection, allowing us to feel immersed in something – whether it’s an atom, or a cityscape.
We talk to companies developing this fast advancing technology and ask – will we be living in a holographic future?
Produced and presented by Matthew Kenyon
(Image: A citizen watches a hologram of the artwork 'A Panorama of Rivers and Mountains' during a digital art exhibition at an art museum on March 11, 2023 in Suzhou, Jiangsu Province of China. Credit: Getty Images)
Business Daily meets: Laura Chinchilla
Latin America’s success stories
Brazil’s agricultural boom
Latin America and the Asian tiger economies
What’s holding Latin America back?
Business Daily meets: Robot inventor Sandy Enoch
Crypto and football: Uneasy team mates
Does the guitar have an image problem?
Is the US bet on sports gambling paying off?
Uganda's refugee women turned entrepreneurs
Business Daily meets: Property tycoon Sanmi Adegoke
Eurovision: Making money out of something I love
Resurrecting ‘ghost’ whisky distilleries
The trouble with live music
What hope for Kosovo's economy?
Meet the trailblazers: The female bike mechanics
Can the Tour de France Femmes deliver?
Tourism cashing in on the ‘pink dollar’
How can recycling be profitable?
Business Daily meets: Picsart CEO Hovhannes Avoyan
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The Business Of
Global News Podcast
The Infinite Monkey Cage
Friday Night Comedy from BBC Radio 4
You’re Dead to Me
Elis James and John Robins