A12 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2021 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021 TODAY FRIDAY TONIGHT HIGH 47° LOW 34° A rain or snow shower; breezy in the p.m. Strong winds subsiding; mostly cloudy ALMANAC SUNDAY 45° 26° 43° 33° Early snow, up to 1"; mostly cloudy MONDAY 52° 32° 44° 25° Partly sunny and not as cool Times of clouds and sun TUESDAY TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normal Record 45° 46° 73° in 1995 23° 25° 1° in 1993 PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" Record 0.80" in 1917 Month to date (normal) 0.43" (0.95") Year to date (normal) 1.09" (2.48") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30.44" SUN, MOON AND PLANETS Rise/Set Today Fri. Sun 6:49am/5:48pm 6:47am/5:50pm Moon 4:01pm/6:21am 5:16pm/6:55am Mercury 5:40am/3:38pm 5:39am/3:36pm Venus 6:40am/5:07pm 6:39am/5:09pm Mars 9:49am/12:47am 9:46am/12:46am Jupiter 5:59am/3:52pm 5:56am/3:49pm Saturn 5:37am/3:12pm 5:34am/3:09pm Uranus 9:08am/11:04pm 9:01am/10:56pm Full Last New First Feb 27 Mar 5 Mar 13 Mar 21 Tonight's sky: The bright star Spica of Virgo, emerging above the ESE. Source: Jim Todd, OMSI UV INDEX TODAY 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. 1 1 1 0 The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index ™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. 0-2 Low, 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme. ROAD CONDITONS For web cameras of our passes, go to www.bendbulletin.com/webcams I-84 at Cabbage Hill: Cloudy with 1-3 inches of snow this afternoon into tonight. US 20 at Santiam Pass: Moderate to heavy snow of 8-15 inches today into tonight. US 26 at Gov't Camp: Snow, 6-12 inches today into tonight. More snow Friday. US 26 at Ochoco Divide: Mostly cloudy with snowfall of 2-4 inches this afternoon. ORE 58 at Willamette Pass: Cloudy today with snowfall of 6-12 inches this afternoon and tonight. ORE 138 at Diamond Lake: Snowfall of 3-6 inches this afternoon into tonight. SKI REPORT EAST: Becoming cloudy Thursday; snowfall of 2-4 inches in the northeast Thurs- day afternoon into Thursday night. CENTRAL: Cloudy Thursday into Thursday night rain and snow likely. Snow levels around 3,500 feet. WEST: Rain and areas of fog are likely Thursday into Thurs- day night. Periods of rain will continue into Friday. NATIONAL Hood River Yesterday Today Friday Yesterday Today Friday Yesterday Today Friday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Astoria 48/31/0.10 47/42/r 47/41/r La Grande 39/25/0.01 36/34/c 36/27/sf Portland 48/34/0.01 48/42/r 49/38/r Baker City 40/26/0.01 34/26/sn 37/22/sf La Pine 42/20/0.00 41/28/c 37/26/c Prineville 43/23/0.00 48/35/c 37/34/c Brookings 55/40/0.00 50/40/pc 50/41/r Medford 55/29/0.00 52/37/c 49/37/r Redmond 45/23/0.00 48/33/c 44/30/r Burns 37/21/Tr 41/25/sf 37/23/sf Newport 50/34/0.01 47/42/r 47/42/r Roseburg 53/33/Tr 50/40/r 46/40/r Eugene 50/33/Tr 49/41/r 48/40/r North Bend 51/36/0.02 50/44/r 49/43/r Salem 49/32/Tr 48/41/r 48/38/r Klamath Falls 43/19/0.00 47/25/pc 42/29/c Ontario 43/28/0.00 37/25/sn 42/24/sh Sisters 43/23/0.00 46/36/c 42/35/r Lakeview 37/14/Tr 41/22/pc 39/24/c Pendleton 45/30/Tr 47/39/sn 43/33/sh The Dalles 52/34/Tr 48/41/sh 49/37/r Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice, Tr-trace, Yesterday data as of 5 p.m. yesterday NATIONAL WEATHER -10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s NATIONAL EXTREMES YESTERDAY (for the T-storms Shown are today’s noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Rain Showers Snow Flurries Ice Warm Front Stationary Front Cold Front Source: OnTheSnow.com Theft Continued from A11 “We’ve seen a couple other states get hit with incredibly large, sudden waves of claims. We certainly want to avoid that,” Gerstenfeld said. Pressed by The Oregonian, the de- partment acknowledged the sharp spike in attempted identity theft from around 900 cases in 2019 to more than 9,000 last year. Gerstenfeld said the rate of overpayments — money paid to claimants who don’t deserve it — increased from 10% in 2019 to at least 14% in 2020. “We think that probably under- states the scale of the issue,” Gersten- feld said. Many of those overpayments were genuine mistakes, by claimants Overcharge Continued from A11 “I believe that the rates should have been cut some- thing in the order of 50-60%,” said Robert Eglet, lead coun- sel for the law firm Eglet Yoga Continued from A11 “This is a business and a cultural activity that is about as Oregon as things get,” said Sen. Sara Gelser, D-Corval- lis, the bill’s chief sponsor. Livestock already inhabit exclusive farm zones, so they wouldn’t create conflicts in agricultural areas, and the number of visitors involved in such activities is natu- rally self-limiting, Gelser said. Large crowds of people wouldn’t be attending goat yoga classes at all hours of the day and night, for example. A “glitch” in existing land use law has caused county governments to object to goat yoga in exclusive farm zones because it’s not consid- ered “equine therapy,” which was permitted in such areas under a bill passed in 2018, she said. Expanding this provision to include livestock would boost goat yoga, “a great vi- sion that brought people to- gether, helped people engage or the employment department, but some share of them were fraud. Still, Gerstenfeld said Oregon be- lieves its fraud losses are considerably smaller, on a per capita basis, than the losses in California and Washington. He said those states were unlucky in that they were hit early in the pan- demic and that Oregon has learned from problems elsewhere. Arizona, California, Massachu- setts, Michigan, Ohio, Rhode Island, Washington and Wisconsin have all disclosed estimated fraud losses during the pandemic. Oregon and a few other states, among them Tennes- see and West Virginia, have said they will not. Michele Evermore, researcher and policy analyst at the National Employ- Adams, which filed the law- suits. “These discounts that were given, were just totally woefully inadequate.” His comments are similar to those made by the Con- sumer Federation of America in September, which said that ment Law Project, said the states have legitimate concerns about disclosing information thieves could use. “If these fraudsters are looking around state to state, and they see a state with a particularly high number, they’re going to say: ‘Oh, this is going to be an easier one to hack,’” Evermore said. She said thieves’ tactics are con- stantly evolving, and they’re looking for any advantage. Still, Evermore said, “The public needs to know what’s going on, too. It’s just hard to figure out how to bal- ance all that.” The employment department is in the process of adding staff as part of an expanded fraud-detection effort, though Gerstenfeld said that wasn’t triggered by any recent increase in the relief provided by insur- ers was not enough and said state insurance commission- ers who regulate the industry had failed “to prevent windfall auto insurer profits as auto claims dropped when driving and auto crashes declined.” “This is a business and a cultural activity that is about as Oregon as things get.” — Sen. Sara Gelser, D-Corvallis, chief sponsor of Senate Bill 559 with livestock and connect with each other,” Gelser said. The restriction has re- duced revenues, tourism and employment in Oregon farms and decreased oppor- tunities for people suffering from mental health prob- lems or undergoing che- motherapy treatments, said Sean Scorvo, a supporter of SB 559. The Oregon Farm Bureau and the farmland preserva- tion group 1000 Friends of Oregon draw a distinction between the existing equine therapy provision and the change proposed in SB 559. Horseback riding is al- ready allowed in exclusive farm zones, so the provision approved in 2018 simply al- lowed counseling to occur Yesterday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Abilene 67/49/0.00 Akron 53/34/Tr Albany 45/35/Tr Albuquerque 62/28/0.00 Anchorage 25/14/0.05 Atlanta 73/42/0.00 Atlantic City 55/36/0.00 Austin 83/63/0.00 Baltimore 63/29/0.00 Billings 35/22/0.01 Birmingham 75/40/0.00 Bismarck 40/30/Tr Boise 43/28/Tr Boston 50/37/0.00 Bridgeport, CT 50/37/0.00 Buffalo 53/33/Tr Burlington, VT 43/34/0.04 Caribou, ME 41/24/Tr Charleston, SC 75/42/0.00 Charlotte 73/32/0.00 Chattanooga 73/36/0.00 Cheyenne 34/17/0.00 Chicago 45/39/0.00 Cincinnati 64/36/0.03 Cleveland 53/35/0.00 Colorado Springs 38/26/0.01 Columbia, MO 53/41/0.00 Columbia, SC 75/33/0.00 Columbus, GA 74/38/0.00 Columbus, OH 58/28/0.07 Concord, NH 48/25/0.01 Corpus Christi 84/65/0.00 Dallas 72/55/0.00 Dayton 58/32/0.00 Denver 43/18/0.00 Des Moines 39/35/0.00 Detroit 53/34/0.00 Duluth 35/27/0.04 El Paso 76/36/0.00 Fairbanks 18/2/0.05 Fargo 29/11/0.19 Flagstaff 51/23/0.00 Grand Rapids 42/34/0.00 Green Bay 40/34/0.04 Greensboro 69/34/0.00 Harrisburg 60/28/0.02 Hartford, CT 48/31/0.00 Helena 37/22/Tr Honolulu 81/71/0.09 Houston 81/57/0.00 Huntsville 72/36/0.00 Indianapolis 58/36/Tr Jackson, MS 78/37/0.00 Jacksonville 78/42/0.00 Today Hi/Lo/W 41/36/r 37/24/pc 36/18/pc 52/29/c 30/24/pc 71/49/pc 46/35/pc 61/50/sh 51/30/pc 38/26/c 68/46/c 47/30/pc 39/28/sn 44/24/s 45/27/s 32/25/pc 32/11/sf 23/-1/c 74/52/s 67/43/pc 66/41/pc 31/19/s 39/24/pc 44/27/pc 35/25/pc 28/17/sn 45/29/pc 72/48/pc 74/54/sh 40/24/pc 38/15/s 75/65/c 55/43/r 41/23/pc 35/18/sn 40/26/s 36/21/pc 34/24/pc 74/38/s 10/4/sn 39/31/s 43/18/pc 36/23/pc 36/21/pc 60/37/pc 46/27/s 42/23/s 35/22/c 81/71/pc 69/62/sh 60/41/c 43/25/pc 68/52/c 78/51/s Amsterdam Athens Auckland Baghdad Bangkok Beijing Beirut Berlin Bogota Budapest Buenos Aires Cabo San Lucas Cairo Calgary Cancun Dublin Edinburgh Geneva Harare Hong Kong Istanbul Jerusalem Johannesburg Lima Lisbon London Madrid Manila 56/41/pc 62/50/s 78/61/pc 69/43/s 97/74/pc 47/17/s 66/54/s 64/45/s 69/50/t 62/37/pc 85/73/s 85/63/pc 72/51/s 38/22/c 82/75/pc 49/37/sh 49/38/pc 63/39/s 77/63/t 74/69/c 51/39/pc 57/44/s 71/60/t 75/66/pc 57/51/r 53/36/c 60/41/c 89/75/s Friday Hi/Lo/W 61/48/pc 44/36/pc 36/25/s 57/30/s 32/30/sn 54/47/sh 39/39/s 65/56/c 49/38/pc 39/23/c 61/58/r 47/21/c 43/24/sf 38/31/s 41/32/s 38/32/s 32/24/s 21/8/s 62/53/sh 46/39/r 53/48/r 34/18/pc 41/35/pc 47/41/c 43/35/s 43/21/s 51/36/c 51/44/sh 66/53/sh 47/38/pc 35/16/s 76/63/pc 56/47/c 46/39/pc 42/19/pc 45/31/pc 38/31/s 37/25/c 69/39/s 20/9/c 41/17/c 50/21/s 40/32/s 40/32/pc 44/36/r 46/36/pc 40/26/s 37/21/sn 81/70/pc 77/65/sh 55/51/r 48/40/c 72/63/sh 76/56/pc City Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln Little Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, WI Memphis Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New York City Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME Providence Raleigh Rapid City Reno Richmond Rochester, NY Sacramento St. Louis Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco San Jose Santa Fe Savannah Seattle Sioux Falls Spokane Springfi eld, MO Tampa Tucson Tulsa Washington, DC Wichita Yakima Yuma Yesterday Hi/Lo/Prec. 36/33/0.07 46/38/0.00 46/36/0.00 73/46/0.00 65/34/0.01 41/35/0.00 71/51/0.00 75/53/0.00 68/41/Tr 40/34/0.00 67/50/0.00 80/70/0.13 43/37/0.00 38/32/0.01 75/43/0.00 74/47/0.00 54/39/0.00 54/33/0.00 70/34/0.00 58/44/0.00 39/35/0.00 81/54/0.00 85/54/0.00 47/35/0.00 56/32/0.00 81/49/0.00 63/29/0.10 47/31/0.00 53/32/0.00 72/34/0.00 39/16/Tr 43/22/0.00 68/31/0.00 54/27/Tr 67/39/0.00 58/48/0.00 39/24/0.04 78/63/0.00 68/49/0.00 71/49/0.00 72/43/0.00 54/22/0.00 77/43/0.00 46/32/0.29 41/30/0.00 37/22/0.00 60/43/0.00 77/54/0.00 79/44/0.00 61/49/0.00 60/32/0.00 53/38/0.00 49/30/0.00 81/51/0.00 Today Hi/Lo/W 38/27/c 46/29/pc 36/22/pc 60/39/s 44/29/pc 42/26/s 53/39/c 72/50/s 49/32/pc 38/20/s 56/41/pc 83/71/pc 39/25/s 36/26/s 55/38/c 73/61/c 45/31/s 46/29/s 50/38/pc 48/35/c 41/28/s 80/55/s 73/50/s 42/26/pc 47/30/s 70/45/s 39/23/pc 41/17/s 45/25/s 60/39/pc 42/25/pc 53/25/s 55/34/pc 33/23/sf 66/41/s 47/31/pc 39/30/s 59/53/c 70/48/s 64/46/s 67/41/s 45/24/c 77/54/s 47/40/r 43/30/s 39/26/sn 48/31/pc 79/59/s 71/39/s 54/36/c 52/34/pc 48/29/pc 52/38/c 70/42/s Friday Hi/Lo/W 37/31/c 48/34/pc 41/30/s 66/45/s 46/41/r 45/26/pc 50/45/r 74/51/s 51/44/c 39/32/pc 55/50/r 83/74/s 39/34/s 39/29/pc 54/50/r 77/64/c 43/35/s 43/35/s 46/43/c 51/39/c 44/27/pc 83/65/pc 79/52/s 48/36/pc 45/36/pc 73/44/pc 43/36/pc 34/23/s 42/29/s 49/40/r 42/20/pc 56/28/s 49/38/c 39/30/s 68/43/s 53/38/c 43/27/c 66/58/sh 68/47/pc 62/46/s 67/41/s 52/24/s 69/55/pc 49/36/pc 45/27/pc 40/24/sf 49/35/c 82/67/pc 71/40/s 50/39/c 50/39/pc 50/33/pc 48/27/pc 76/43/pc 83/64/0.00 79/50/0.00 37/34/0.28 9/-4/0.34 81/59/0.00 83/70/0.00 87/57/0.00 51/36/0.00 40/32/0.07 36/27/0.23 66/48/0.00 86/73/0.00 66/39/0.00 86/57/0.00 84/72/0.42 30/23/0.03 46/23/0.00 60/45/0.00 87/75/0.01 48/32/0.00 68/61/0.96 81/63/0.00 68/54/0.00 53/39/0.00 46/32/0.05 43/28/0.00 59/30/0.00 63/34/0.00 84/61/pc 77/51/s 23/6/pc 42/39/sn 81/56/pc 82/72/s 89/60/pc 56/41/pc 44/30/c 23/4/pc 61/45/pc 83/74/pc 63/44/s 84/57/s 78/66/t 27/13/sf 48/26/pc 65/50/r 90/76/t 50/36/c 79/68/t 86/62/s 67/51/t 52/43/pc 32/23/s 46/39/pc 57/37/pc 60/42/s 88/66/s 81/54/s 29/19/s 43/35/c 83/57/s 82/73/s 91/64/pc 50/39/r 45/29/pc 31/20/s 50/37/pc 81/73/t 61/45/pc 85/58/s 76/65/r 25/15/sf 58/31/pc 52/50/sh 90/76/pc 47/31/pc 79/68/pc 83/64/sh 68/54/s 53/40/c 37/28/s 47/32/s 58/41/pc 54/38/r INTERNATIONAL 48 contiguous states) National high: 93° at Kingsville, TX National low: -15° at Daniel, WY Precipitation: 4.15" at Pompano Beach, FL In inches as of 5 p.m. yesterday Ski resort New snow Base Anthony Lakes Mtn 8 0-70 Hoodoo Ski Area 2 0-95 Mt. Ashland 0 63-67 Mt. Bachelor 1 112-122 Mt. Hood Meadows 9 0-172 Mt. Hood Ski Bowl 7 65-91 Timberline Lodge 5 0-168 Willamette Pass 0 0-80 Aspen / Snowmass, CO 0 43-60 Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 0 65-110 Squaw Valley, CA 0 0-118 Park City Mountain, UT 0 50-60 Sun Valley, ID 0 88-107 Sunny TRAVEL WEATHER Umatilla 52/44 Rufus Hermiston 45/40 52/44 48/41 Arlington Hillsboro Portland Meacham Lostine 51/41 48/41 48/42 34/32 Wasco 35/30 Enterprise Pendleton The Dalles Tillamook 34/29 46/39 47/39 Sandy 48/41 McMinnville 47/43 Joseph Heppner La Grande 44/39 Maupin Government 49/42 36/34 34/28 Camp 47/38 Condon 43/39 Union Lincoln City 43/32 35/31 35/31 Salem 49/44 Spray Granite Warm Springs 48/41 Madras 47/33 Albany 33/29 Newport Baker City 48/38 50/38 Mitchell 47/42 48/41 34/26 Camp Sherman 44/31 Redmond Corvallis John Yachats Unity 44/36 48/33 49/40 Day Prineville 48/44 37/32 Ontario Sisters 48/35 Paulina 42/30 37/25 Florence Eugene 46/36 Bend Brothers 40/28 Vale 49/45 49/41 47/34 41/26 Sunriver 37/24 Nyssa 42/32 Hampton Cottage La Pine 40/25 Juntura Oakridge Grove 41/28 41/26 OREGON EXTREMES Coos Bay Burns 42/29 45/36 48/40 Fort Rock 50/44 41/25 Riley YESTERDAY Crescent 45/27 41/29 High: 55° 40/27 Bandon Roseburg Christmas Valley Jordan Valley at Medford Beaver Frenchglen Silver 50/46 50/40 44/27 37/25 Low: 14° Marsh Lake 45/26 Port Orford 40/23 44/26 at Lakeview Grants Burns Junction Paisley 50/44 Pass 46/30 Chiloquin 44/26 52/40 Rome Medford 42/28 Gold Beach 52/37 47/32 49/43 Klamath Fields Ashland McDermitt Lakeview Falls Brookings 45/26 50/37 47/25 38/22 50/40 41/22 Seaside 47/42 Cannon Beach 46/42 55° 29° Partly sunny Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. Astoria 47/42 WEDNESDAY 51° 26° Clouds and sun with a shower possible OREGON WEATHER Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m. yest. High Low SATURDAY on-site in a way that’s “inci- dental and subordinate” to the agricultural use, accord- ing to submitted testimony from the organizations. “Here, in contrast, the un- derlying business is yoga,” the letter said. The groups have urged lawmakers against approv- ing the bill because the pres- ence of livestock doesn’t render nonfarm uses “com- patible with neighboring ag- ricultural practices” or the statewide goal of preserving farmland. “Were this bill to pass, it is hard to imagine where the line could be drawn between actual farm use of farmland and simply adding animals to any use,” according to their testimony. 64/50/0.00 70/52/0.00 75/59/0.00 66/43/0.00 94/77/0.00 41/24/0.00 66/54/0.00 65/47/0.00 66/48/0.02 63/30/0.00 87/68/0.00 84/56/0.00 70/54/0.00 34/16/0.02 84/72/0.00 52/49/0.06 51/50/0.13 59/36/0.00 78/59/0.10 76/67/0.00 48/41/0.10 58/47/0.00 75/61/0.68 75/67/0.00 64/48/0.03 60/54/0.02 59/36/0.00 93/77/0.00 claims. Oregon has paid nearly $8 billion in jobless benefits in the 11 months since the pandemic began last March, more each month than it typically pays in an entire year. An unprecedented 750,000 people have received some class of unemployment benefit during that time. Without figures on the state’s actual fraud losses, it’s impossible to know for sure whether Oregon has indeed performed better at preventing fraud than it has at paying benefits. Law- makers are divided over the depart- ment’s refusal to say how much it has lost. “California and Washington have been forthcoming with some of their issues. I don’t know why we can’t,” said 50/36/pc 65/45/s 78/62/pc 71/44/s 97/75/pc 50/21/s 67/56/s 50/38/r 69/50/t 59/43/pc 83/71/s 84/62/pc 70/52/s 27/11/sn 84/75/s 53/42/c 52/42/c 61/43/r 73/61/t 76/63/pc 56/40/s 59/48/s 74/58/t 75/67/pc 62/52/sh 52/36/s 64/40/c 89/77/s Mecca Mexico City Montreal Moscow Nairobi Nassau New Delhi Osaka Oslo Ottawa Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome Santiago Sao Paulo Sapporo Seoul Shanghai Singapore Stockholm Sydney Taipei City Tel Aviv Tokyo Toronto Vancouver Vienna Warsaw Sen. Betsy Johnson, D-Scappoose, co- chair of the Legislature’s joint Com- mittee on Ways and Means. “Being transparent about the deficiencies is not going to incentivize fraud. The fraud already exists.” Rep. David Gomberg, a Demo- crat representing parts of the Oregon Coast, repeatedly raised the issue of unemployment fraud at legislative hearings this month. But he said he is sympathetic to the employment de- partment’s position, and intends to seek a confidential briefing to obtain more information. “I am frustrated but understand their explanation,” Gomberg said. “Again, I would like to know more but not if it results in costs to the fund or more fraud.” Holograms Continued from A11 “As you look to that hybrid model, companies are going to have to innovate around that interplay between the re- mote employee experience and in-office employee experi- ence,” said Lisa Walker, the vice president of brand at Fuze, a teleconferencing service. “The technologies that can solve for that are going to pop.” Holograms might not be the next big thing, but startups in the 3D space are positioning their offerings just in case. The three-dimensional light projections have primarily been seen re-creating musi- cians onstage in recent years. Companies have wanted to bring them into homes, but the projection hardware is still too expensive for most peo- ple to afford. Companies, on the other hand, have larger budgets. And now software advancements are unlocking ways to use laptops, comput- ers and smartphones to engage with and stream holograms emitted elsewhere. In December, ARHT media showed what a hologram-en- abled conference could look like as it beamed an executive from Los Angeles to Singa- pore to speak at an innovation summit. The event brought together a “small group” of at- tendees and was broadcast live to a larger audience online. Traditionally, setting up ARHT Media/Imverse Holographic speakers from Australia, Greece and Germany stand together on one stage. high-definition holograms requires a team of projection technicians. However, ARHT’s HoloPod was designed to be a quick-setup, plug-and-play sys- tem that’s simpler to deploy. On the remote side, a pre- senter would stand in front of a green screen, looking at a shot of the audience on a mon- itor. Meanwhile, cameras cap- ture the speaker from all an- gles. At the worksite, someone could roll the HoloPod out of a closet, turn on a computer and connect to a live stream. ARHT’s software strings it all together and will enable pre- senters to respond in almost real time. People would then see the illusion of the presenter pro- jected onto a reflective mesh. In video demonstrations, the $20,000 suite of hologram technology lacks some clarity. You can look at it and tell it’s not a real person. Still, the company enables people to engage with life-size, three-dimensional representa- tions of people who aren’t actu- ally there. “When you see traditional streaming services like Zoom, it’s typically just a headshot. You’re missing 50% of their body language,” said Larry T. O’Reilly, CEO of ARHT Me- dia. “However, when you see somebody in a live hologram, and they appear to be 3D with- out the need of 3D glasses, your brain is telling you to run the room.”