Updating Bloom to Start Gesture on Kiosk page

@scooley @yannisle 
Updated the terms at top of doc to include new terms for HL2.
Doc also seems suspect of need of overhaul of instruction on need for XML files with Intune but I want to confirm before making those edits.
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Evan Miller 2020-01-24 13:00:26 -08:00 committed by GitHub
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@ -20,7 +20,7 @@ In Windows 10, version 1803, you can configure your HoloLens devices to run as m
When HoloLens is configured as a multi-app kiosk, only the allowed apps are available to the user. The benefit of a multi-app kiosk, or fixed-purpose device, is to provide an easy-to-understand experience for individuals by putting in front of them only the things they need to use, and removing from their view the things they dont need to access.
Single-app kiosk mode starts the specified app when the user signs in, and restricts the user's ability to launch new apps or change the running app. When single-app kiosk mode is enabled for HoloLens, the bloom gesture and Cortana are disabled, and placed apps aren't shown in the user's surroundings.
Single-app kiosk mode starts the specified app when the user signs in, and restricts the user's ability to launch new apps or change the running app. When single-app kiosk mode is enabled for HoloLens, the [start gestures](https://docs.microsoft.com/hololens/hololens2-basic-usage#start-gesture) (including [Bloom](https://docs.microsoft.com/hololens/hololens1-basic-usage) on HoloLens (1st Gen)) and Cortana are disabled, and placed apps aren't shown in the user's surroundings.
The following table lists the device capabilities in the different kiosk modes.