Microsoft's plans for Kinect include future laptop, tablet integration

Shawn Knight

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Microsoft’s chief research and strategy officer Craig Mundie recently spoke at the company’s TechForum in Seattle, revealing where Redmond hopes to take Kinect in the coming months and years. The long-term goal is to make the device as cheap and as small as possible so it can fit into a wide range of devices like notebooks and tablets, he said.

Mundie told The Verge that it’s not going to happen tomorrow but Microsoft can see a path towards that sort of thing. Of course, shrinking Kinect isn’t the only challenge Microsoft faces as current iterations don’t work in daylight. As the executive explains, Kinect uses infrared and under direct daylight, the sun simply drowns out the sensor, rendering it useless.

Microsoft recently unveiled a new Envisioning Center that is being used to test their latest ideas and concepts. As we understand it, a number of the demonstrations use Kinect technology in some form or another.

During their visit to the center, the publication noticed that several Kinect sensors looked to be thinner and smaller than existing ones. A company spokesperson declined to comment on whether or not they were sensors based on Kinect 2 technology. Odds are that we won’t see second generation Kinect technology show up until Microsoft announces the Xbox 720.

A little over a year ago we heard rumors that Microsoft was working with Asus to develop a Kinect-equipped Windows 8 laptop but as of writing, we still haven’t heard anything further about that project.

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Cool for things like that in a way, but not cool on my xbox. its useless for the gaming I do, making it madatory is stupid for that.
 
If they can deliver a pretty serious increase in accuracy, it could be great. Having seen the last Kinect in action, though, I think that Leap Motion thing has much more potential, it seems really accurate and intuitive.
 
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