Microsoft’s Kinect sensor for Xbox 360, confirmed last year as the Fastest Selling Consumer Electronics Device in History by Guiness World Records, has now been officially made available for the ...
Now that Kinect hardware is available for Windows, app developers can get busy bringing voice and motion control to desktop PCs. Microsoft is already working on Kinect Windows apps with hundreds of ...
The new Kinect, the second generation of Microsoft's motion capture camera technology, has been making healthcare headlines for nearly a year now as a few select companies were able to tinker with ...
It's official: Kinect is not just a toy anymore (not that it ever was). In a statement today, Microsoft has announced that it's responding to consumer feedback and creating a PC version of its ...
Microsoft’s Kinect motion-tracking sensor for Windows and Xbox 360 can today, out of the box, keep track of basic body parts like your arms and legs. It’s not very good at keeping track of rapid ...
Microsoft has confirmed Kinect support for Windows operating systems. A non-commercial starter kit will provide access to the device's audio and system capabilities, as well as direct control of the ...
It's official: Microsoft Kinect for Windows goes live on February 1. Announced by Steve Ballmer at Microsoft's final CES keynote, the technology is coming with the official Microsoft Kinect SDK, which ...
During their CES Keynote last night, Microsoft announced that the PC version of the Kinect would be coming very soon: February 1st in the US, to be precise. "Kinect for Windows", as it's called, will ...
Xbox One Kinect will not be compatible with PCs, Microsoft has confirmed. Unlike the Xbox 360 Kinect sensor, which comes with a PC adaptor, the Xbox One sensor has been designed specifically for the ...
Microsoft will stop selling the original Kinect for Windows in 2015 now that the second generation of the motion-based controller platform is available. In a blog post, Microsoft advised enterprises ...
This is fun and cool and I can see a few legit non-game uses (like healthcare), but I doubt I'll be using it in business apps anytime soon. Altho those of us trapped in cubical habitrails could ...