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  "description": "Looking Glass has introduced musubi, a holographic photo and video frame aimed at bringing holograms into the home. It’s a standalone device with no need for connectivity, built to change how we view and share memories by making them feel more alive and present.",
  "path": "/looking-glass-introduces-musubi-holographic-photo-frame/",
  "publishedAt": "2026-03-19T16:12:37.000Z",
  "site": "https://www.remixreality.com",
  "tags": [
    "Kickstarter / Looking Glass"
  ],
  "textContent": "  * Looking Glass has launched musubi, a consumer device that converts photos and videos into holograms using a local desktop application.\n  * The standalone frame stores up to 1,000 holograms and runs without WiFi, cloud processing, or subscription requirements.\n\n\n\n* * *\n\nLooking Glass has introduced musubi, a holographic photo and video frame aimed at bringing holograms into the home. It’s a standalone device with no need for connectivity, built to change how we view and share memories by making them feel more alive and present.\n\nSource: Looking Glass / YouTube\n\nUsers can turn photos or moments from videos into holograms, then move them onto the device over USB-C. The frame can hold up to 1,000 holograms and plays them on a loop or lets you click through them manually. The device has a built-in speaker and a rechargeable battery that supports up to three hours of wireless playback.\n\nLooking Glass, founded in 2014, is a hologram and light field display company with multiple hardware and software patents and a history of shipping display products and running Kickstarter campaigns. musubi is built on its Hololuminescent Display technology, previously used in larger display systems. The Kickstarter campaign has raised $347,744 from 2,541 backers, over 34x its $10,000 goal, with 21 days remaining, and offers early pricing starting at $109 with estimated delivery in June 2026.\n\n* * *\n\n### 🌀 **Tom’s Take:**\n\nThis is Looking Glass taking the technology it has already built for larger displays and packaging it into a simple, self-contained product for everyday use. This form factor not only makes holographic media accessible but also leverages existing media formats consumers use every day, rather than new proprietary formats.\n\n* * *\n\n_Source:_ Kickstarter / Looking Glass",
  "title": "Looking Glass Introduces Musubi Holographic Photo Frame",
  "updatedAt": "2026-03-19T16:30:28.004Z"
}