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I'm The King of Business & Technology in the Modern World-Chapter 96: The Reveal
January 3, 2021.
The early morning sun filtered through the glass walls of Sentinel Systems' executive office, casting long golden streaks over the polished floors. Matthew sat behind his sleek carbon-black desk, his fingers steepled, his gaze locked onto the holographic projection floating just above his desk.
This was it.
The next big move.
Angel stepped in, dressed in her usual black blazer and tailored slacks, carrying her tablet. She raised an eyebrow at the floating interface above Matthew's desk.
"Alright, boss. What is it this time?" she asked, taking a seat across from him.
Matthew smirked and gestured at the hologram. "Meet Sentinel OS—the first fully interactive holographic operating system."
Angel blinked. "Wait. What?"
Matthew tapped a thin, sleek metal plate on his desk, and instantly, the floating interface expanded, revealing a 3D desktop environment. Instead of clicking on icons with a mouse, Matthew simply reached out and moved his hands, and the system responded instantly, shifting, resizing, and executing commands with nothing but gestures.
Angel watched in stunned silence as Matthew effortlessly swiped through windows, manipulating spreadsheets, design schematics, and live data feeds with pinches and swipes in mid-air.
"…Alright," Angel finally said, "I've seen some crazy tech in my time, but this?" She leaned forward, adjusting her glasses. "Explain."
Matthew grinned. "What you're looking at is a holographic UI and OS—a system that completely eliminates traditional monitors, keyboards, and mice. Instead, users will interact with their devices through a fully volumetric interface, using hand gestures, voice commands, and real-time AI-assisted automation."
Angel leaned back, crossing her arms. "So, it's like Tony Stark's tech in the MCU?"
Matthew chuckled. "Except this isn't sci-fi—it's real. And Sentinel will be the first company to bring it to market."
Angel exhaled. "Okay. Let's break it down. How the hell does this thing work?"
Matthew leaned forward, bringing up a technical breakdown of the system.
"There are three key components that make Sentinel OS possible:
Holographic Projection System – Instead of traditional screens, we use an advanced laser-phased light field projection system to generate true volumetric images in mid-air. This means the user can see and interact with 3D applications in real space without the need for VR headsets.
AI-Powered Gesture Recognition – The system is equipped with LiDAR and ultrasonic motion tracking, allowing users to manipulate objects using precise hand gestures. It can detect individual finger movements down to the millimeter, making it far more responsive than any touchscreen.
Quantum Processing & Cloud Integration – Instead of running the OS from a local machine, Sentinel OS will be a cloud-based AI-driven system, leveraging Sentinel's quantum computing resources for real-time processing, ensuring instant response times and seamless multitasking."
Angel whistled. "Damn. That's a lot of tech."
Matthew smirked. "And that's just the surface level."
Angel tapped her tablet, taking notes. "Alright. This is impressive. But how does this translate into profit?"
Matthew's smirk widened. "That's where it gets interesting." He brought up market projections on the holographic display.
"The global operating system market is valued at $50 billion annually. Microsoft dominates with Windows, Apple controls macOS, and Google owns Chrome OS and Android. But all of them are still stuck in the traditional desktop environment.
Sentinel OS isn't just a new OS—it's an entirely new way of interacting with technology."
Angel narrowed her eyes. "You're telling me… you're not just competing with Windows, you're replacing the entire concept of a PC?"
Matthew nodded. "Exactly. Once this system is integrated into corporate offices, high-tech labs, medical research centers, and even the consumer market, we're looking at a potential trillion-dollar industry."
Angel exhaled. "Jesus. This isn't just an OS—this is a new digital ecosystem."
Matthew nodded. "And Sentinel will be the first to bring it to market."
Angel crossed her arms. "Alright. Let's talk money. How are we monetizing this?"
Matthew pulled up another set of data.
"We have three primary revenue streams:
Enterprise Licensing – We sell Sentinel OS as a premium AI-driven holographic OS for businesses, priced at $5,000 per corporate workstation per year. Target customers? Fortune 500 companies, AI research labs, medical institutions, and financial firms.
Consumer Market – A more affordable home version with a subscription model ($100 per month) for personal computing, gaming, and smart home automation.
Government & Defense Contracts – The military and intelligence sectors will jump on this. A holographic command center for real-time surveillance, cybersecurity operations, and battlefield intelligence? Easily a $10 billion+ contract."
Angel nodded slowly, processing. "So, in short… we're creating the future of computing and making billions in the process."
Matthew smirked. "Exactly."
Angel rubbed her temples. "Okay, this sounds insanely profitable. But also… insanely risky."
Matthew leaned forward. "Explain."
Angel tapped on her tablet. "You're disrupting Microsoft, Apple, and Google at the same time. You're not just taking a piece of the industry—you're redesigning it. If we roll this out, expect massive resistance."
Matthew nodded. "I know. But here's the advantage: No one else has this tech."
Angel exhaled. "Still, we'll need security measures. Tech giants kill competition before it even grows. We can't afford sabotage."
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Matthew smirked. "Already accounted for. Our R&D is completely isolated, and all prototypes are stored in Sentinel's off-grid facility. No leaks."
Angel nodded. "Alright. So… what's next?"
Matthew stood up, crossing his arms. "Next step? We build the first working prototype and prepare for the closed beta launch."
Angel raised an eyebrow. "Beta launch?"
Matthew smirked. "We're testing Sentinel OS with select clients—top-tier companies that can provide feedback before we go global."
Angel nodded. "Smart. That way, we fix the bugs before the world sees it."
Matthew checked his watch. "Get R&D on it immediately. We need a fully working demo in six months."
Angel smirked. "Six months? You really don't do small projects, huh?"
Matthew chuckled. "Angel, when have I ever done small?"
Angel sighed, shaking her head with a grin. "Fine. I'll notify the team."
As she walked out, Matthew turned back to the floating holographic UI.
This was it.
The future.
And Sentinel was going to build it.