Disney’s Latest Innovation Is a HoloTile Floor That Seems to Have a Mind of Its Own

Disney demoed the floor this weekend.

By Sherin Shibu | edited by Melissa Malamut | Aug 12, 2024
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Key Takeaways

  • Disney demoed a HoloTile floor, or a floor made up of rotating tiles, at its D23 fan event.
  • The tiles move together to make the person or object on the floor appear to move on their own.
  • The floor could have applications in virtual reality, special effects, and theater.

An object appears to be moving completely on its own. But it isn’t telekinesis or some kind of magic pushing it across the room, it’s Disney’s new HoloTile floor.

Disney , which features small rotating tiles that work together to move a person or object, at its D23 fan event last week and viewers were .

Anyone could walk on the HoloTile floor in any direction, and the floor would automatically move to keep them within the tiles, opening up use cases in areas like virtual reality.

The HoloTile floor can also “support any number of people being on that same floor… and being able to be in virtual reality,” said Disney Research Fellow Lanny Smoot . “What we have then is a sort of holodeck, if you will, a place where people can walk in imaginary places, walk to help us design new attractions, and it can also move anything on its surface.”

Smoot was inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in January and into the HoloTile floor, at that time. Disney doesn’t yet know where the floor will be used, but there are “just so many applications” of it, including embedding it in theater stages, Smoot had said.

Related: This Former Disney Princess Lived ‘Paycheck to Paycheck’ Before Starting a Side Hustle at Home — Now She Makes $250,000 a Year

Tech reviewer Marques Brownlee to walk on the HoloTile floor in April, and he said he envisioned a future version with smaller and more numerous tiles.

Disney’s D23 event also featured , including one going deeper into the engineering behind .

Key Takeaways

  • Disney demoed a HoloTile floor, or a floor made up of rotating tiles, at its D23 fan event.
  • The tiles move together to make the person or object on the floor appear to move on their own.
  • The floor could have applications in virtual reality, special effects, and theater.

An object appears to be moving completely on its own. But it isn’t telekinesis or some kind of magic pushing it across the room, it’s Disney’s new HoloTile floor.

Disney , which features small rotating tiles that work together to move a person or object, at its D23 fan event last week and viewers were .

Anyone could walk on the HoloTile floor in any direction, and the floor would automatically move to keep them within the tiles, opening up use cases in areas like virtual reality.

Sherin Shibu • News Reporter

Âé¶¹Éç Staff
Sherin Shibu is a business news reporter at Âé¶¹Éç.com. She previously worked for PCMag, Business... Read more
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