Datamation content and product recommendations are
editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links
to our partners.
Learn More
Two weeks after Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer hinted that the company may soon come out with a way to integrate its hit Kinect controller-less game controller to Windows PCs, a popular tech rumors site reported that its sources say to watch for device drivers and a software developers kit (SDK) for Kinect perhaps in the near future.
WinRumorssaid this week that the SDK and device drivers are underway already.
“Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) is set to unveil driver support and an SDK in the coming months and will allow third-party developers to create titles that utilize the Kinect sensor when plugged into a PC,” the tech site said.
Meanwhile, the University of Washington student newspaper, The Daily, reported that electrical engineering graduate students at the school figured out a way to use Microsoft’s Kinect to provide force feedback for surgeons doing surgical robotics.
Kinect uses sensors to enable players to control games with movements and gestures using a small unit equipped with set of sensors to detect their motions in three dimensions. The controller, which only works with the Xbox 360 game console, began shippingin early November.
By many measures, the controller has been a hit.
Microsoft planned to sell 5 million Kinects during the holiday sales season but, instead, sold 8 million. Granted that those are units sold into the channel and not necessarily all sold to end users, the numbers are significant.
During an interview with the BBC at the Consumer Electronics Showin early January, Ballmer was asked whether Microsoft is working on a Kinect link up to PCs.
“We’ll support that in a formal way in the right time and, when we’ve got an announcement to make, we’ll make it,” Ballmer told the interviewer.
In fact, Microsoft executives have already said that they plan to link Kinect into Windows, and not just for games. They are already working on software to link Kinect into even the company’s enterprise unified messaging solution, known as Lync 2010.
At Lync 2010’s launch in late November, Chris Capossela, senior vice president of the Office Division, said nearly as much.
“[We] are working on a piece of software [for Lync] called Video Kinect which will be delivered to all Kinect [users] as a seamless update,” Capossela told partners attending Lync 2010’s rollout.
Additionally, last fall Microsoft announced it had bought 3D gesture sensingtechnology firm Canesta.
Microsoft almost has no choice because many hacks to connect Kinect to Windows 7 PCs, and Apple Macs, have already surfaced. Better do its own links rather than let third parties do it.
Microsoft still isn’t talking specifics about links to Windows, though.
“At this time we have no information to share,” a Microsoft spokesperson told InternetNews.comin an e-mail.
WinRumors also said that Kinect support in Windows 8 is planned.
One point in Kinect’s favor: the unit is inexpensive — retailing for around $150.
That also helped make it attractive to the UW students, according to The Daily’sstory. Similar systems built especially for such purposes can cost as much as $50,000, the article said.
“For robotics-assisted surgeries, the surgeon has no sense of touch right now,” the student newspaper quoted Howard Chizeck, UW professor of electrical engineering, as saying. “What we’re doing is using that sense of touch to give information to the surgeon, like ‘You don’t want to go here.'”
Stuart J. Johnston is a contributing writer at InternetNews.com, the news service of Internet.com, the network for technology professionals. Follow him on Twitter @stuartj1000.
-
Ethics and Artificial Intelligence: Driving Greater Equality
FEATURE | By James Maguire,
December 16, 2020
-
AI vs. Machine Learning vs. Deep Learning
FEATURE | By Cynthia Harvey,
December 11, 2020
-
Huawei’s AI Update: Things Are Moving Faster Than We Think
FEATURE | By Rob Enderle,
December 04, 2020
-
Keeping Machine Learning Algorithms Honest in the ‘Ethics-First’ Era
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE | By Guest Author,
November 18, 2020
-
Key Trends in Chatbots and RPA
FEATURE | By Guest Author,
November 10, 2020
-
Top 10 AIOps Companies
FEATURE | By Samuel Greengard,
November 05, 2020
-
What is Text Analysis?
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE | By Guest Author,
November 02, 2020
-
How Intel’s Work With Autonomous Cars Could Redefine General Purpose AI
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE | By Rob Enderle,
October 29, 2020
-
Dell Technologies World: Weaving Together Human And Machine Interaction For AI And Robotics
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE | By Rob Enderle,
October 23, 2020
-
The Super Moderator, or How IBM Project Debater Could Save Social Media
FEATURE | By Rob Enderle,
October 16, 2020
-
Top 10 Chatbot Platforms
FEATURE | By Cynthia Harvey,
October 07, 2020
-
Finding a Career Path in AI
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE | By Guest Author,
October 05, 2020
-
CIOs Discuss the Promise of AI and Data Science
FEATURE | By Guest Author,
September 25, 2020
-
Microsoft Is Building An AI Product That Could Predict The Future
FEATURE | By Rob Enderle,
September 25, 2020
-
Top 10 Machine Learning Companies 2021
FEATURE | By Cynthia Harvey,
September 22, 2020
-
NVIDIA and ARM: Massively Changing The AI Landscape
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE | By Rob Enderle,
September 18, 2020
-
Continuous Intelligence: Expert Discussion [Video and Podcast]
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE | By James Maguire,
September 14, 2020
-
Artificial Intelligence: Governance and Ethics [Video]
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE | By James Maguire,
September 13, 2020
-
IBM Watson At The US Open: Showcasing The Power Of A Mature Enterprise-Class AI
FEATURE | By Rob Enderle,
September 11, 2020
-
Artificial Intelligence: Perception vs. Reality
FEATURE | By James Maguire,
September 09, 2020
SEE ALL
APPLICATIONS ARTICLES