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I'm The King of Business & Technology in the Modern World-Chapter 97: Setting the Foundation for the Sentinel OS
January 4, 2021.
Matthew wasted no time. The moment Angel walked out of his office, he sent a priority directive to the Sentinel Systems R&D division. The holographic operating system wasn't just another software—it was an entirely new computing paradigm, and they needed a fully functional prototype within six months.
Project Kickoff – Sentinel OS Development Phase 1.
By 10 AM, the core development team was gathered in Sentinel's top-secret R&D facility, a state-of-the-art innovation hub located in a secured underground complex beneath their headquarters.
Standing at the head of the room, Matthew surveyed the engineers, designers, and AI specialists in front of him. The best of the best.
"Alright," Matthew started, setting his tablet on the conference table. "We're about to build something that's going to change the future of computing. Sentinel OS will be the world's first true holographic interface, replacing traditional monitors, keyboards, and touchscreens. Our mission? A working prototype by June 2021."
The room was silent for a moment, then a few murmurs rippled through the group. Some engineers exchanged excited glances, others scribbled notes on their tablets.
Dr. Adrian Velasquez, the lead AI engineer, adjusted his glasses. "A six-month timeline? That's… ambitious."
Matthew smirked. "Everything we do here is ambitious."
Angel, seated beside him, nodded. "We need to break this down into phases, and everyone needs to know their roles." She tapped her tablet, bringing up a development roadmap that appeared on the large holographic display behind Matthew.
Phase 1: Core System Architecture & Infrastructure
"First," Matthew continued, "we need to build the foundation. That means designing Sentinel OS's holographic rendering engine, AI-driven gesture tracking, and quantum-assisted data processing architecture."
Dr. Velasquez leaned forward. "For the holographic interface, do we have the hardware specs locked down?"
Angel nodded. "We've partnered with Horizon Optics for their prototype laser-phased projection units. They're providing us with early volumetric light-field projectors, which we'll integrate into the system."
Marcus Ortega, the data scientist, raised a hand. "How are we handling real-time motion tracking? We need ultra-low latency, or the UI will feel sluggish."
Matthew turned to Elias Mendoza, the former NSA cybersecurity expert.
"Elias, your team will oversee the integration of LiDAR and ultrasonic motion tracking sensors into the OS. These sensors will enable sub-millimeter accuracy for gesture recognition."
Elias nodded. "We can integrate multi-layer tracking to compensate for light distortions."
Matthew continued, "For processing power, Sentinel OS will run on Sentinel's quantum computing grid. That means our OS won't rely on traditional CPUs or GPUs—it will be cloud-based, running on AI-optimized quantum processing units."
Marcus whistled. "That's bold. No one's ever attempted an OS that's fully quantum-compute-driven."
Angel crossed her arms. "That's why we're doing it."
Matthew smirked. "Next up—software architecture."
Phase 2: Holographic UI Framework & AI-driven Interaction
Matthew brought up a real-time rendering prototype on the holographic screen. A floating 3D workspace appeared, showcasing intuitive hand-gesture interactions.
"This is our interaction model," he explained. "Users will be able to drag, drop, resize, and manipulate applications in 3D space. Instead of static screens, the UI will be adaptive, meaning users can arrange their workflow however they want."
Hannah Kim, the cybersecurity specialist, tapped her pen against her tablet. "This looks great, but what about user authentication? A system this advanced is a prime target for cyber threats."
Angel responded immediately. "That's where Sentinel OS will outclass every competitor. We're integrating multi-layer biometric security—iris scanning, facial recognition, and gait analysis. No passwords. No manual logins."
Hannah raised an eyebrow. "And hacking attempts?"
Elias smirked. "Sentinel OS will use AI-driven anomaly detection. Any unauthorized attempt to access, alter, or manipulate the OS environment will be flagged and blocked in real-time."
Matthew nodded. "We're combining deep-learning security protocols with real-time threat detection. The AI will learn every user's patterns, preferences, and movement behaviors. If something deviates from the norm? Immediate lockdown."
Dr. Velasquez leaned forward. "I assume we're also implementing AI-assisted automation?"
Matthew tapped on his tablet, and a demo video played, showing a user commanding the OS with voice and gestures simultaneously.
"Users will be able to control everything with a mix of gestures, voice commands, and direct AI-driven automation. The system will anticipate user behavior and pre-load frequently used files and apps before they even ask."
Marcus grinned. "So, the OS basically learns what you need before you do."
Matthew smirked. "Exactly."
Phase 3: Market Strategy & Commercialization
Angel took over. "Let's talk business. We're aiming for a dual-market approach:
Enterprise Sector (B2B) – Large corporations, government agencies, and research labs.
Premium Consumer Market (B2C) – High-net-worth individuals, tech enthusiasts, and professionals."
She brought up a revenue projection model.
"Estimated pricing models:
Enterprise License – $5,000 per workstation per year.
Consumer Subscription – $100 per month."
Dr. Velasquez raised an eyebrow. "So, this is a subscription-based OS?"
Angel nodded. "Yes. No one-time purchase—this ensures constant revenue flow."
Matthew added, "We're also positioning Sentinel OS as a service, meaning users can access their workspace from any device, as long as it's connected to Sentinel's cloud infrastructure."
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Marcus chuckled. "That's going to destroy traditional operating systems."
Matthew smirked. "That's the idea."
Phase 4: Prototype Development Timeline
Matthew turned back to the team. "We need a functioning prototype within six months. Here's how we'll do it."
January – February: Core system architecture, AI framework, motion tracking calibration.
March – April: Holographic UI design, AI-assisted automation, gesture refinement.
May: Full-scale beta testing in select corporate environments.
June: Pre-launch demonstration to investors and key stakeholders.
Angel exhaled. "That's tight."
Matthew nodded. "It is. But we're Sentinel. We don't follow the industry—we lead it."
Final Thoughts
Dr. Velasquez stood up. "This is one of the most ambitious tech projects in history. If we pull this off… we're not just building a new OS. We're redefining computing itself."
Hannah smirked. "And we're making billions in the process."
Matthew's gaze sharpened. "Trillions."
The room went silent for a second.
Angel finally grinned. "Alright. Let's build the future."
Matthew nodded. "Meeting adjourned. Get to work."
As the team filed out, Matthew turned back to the floating holographic UI.
This was just the beginning.
Sentinel OS wasn't just an operating system.
It was the future of computing.