After at least 3 several years of sneak peeks, Microsoft is finally set to consider the official wraps off its PlayTable technologies.PlayTable — which also has gone by the codenames “Table” and, most recently,
Office 2007 Standard, “Project Milan” — is a a multi-touch, gestural- and object-recognition interface technology on which Microsoft has been laboring for the past few decades.Microsoft is expected to unveil the PlayTable technologies next week, according to sources close to the company. (No word on what the “official” name of the technologies will be. Maybe it will be something interesting, though, given Microsoft;s seemingly growing trend to dump clunky product names for recent choices like “Silverlight” and “Popfly.”)I asked Microsoft officials for comment on PlayTable;s roll-out schedule. No word back yet.Microsoft officials have shown various demos — including one at last year;s internal company meeting — of how PlayTable;s sensor-based technology can be used to facilitate gestures, touch, and other emerging input modes on various computing surfaces.Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates also provided a PlayTable-related technologies demo during his Consumer Electronics Show (CES) keynote address in 2006,
Microsoft Office Enterprise 2007, when he placed a cell phone containing digital photos on a tabletop device and all the pictures “flew out of it” and could be manipulated by touch and gestures. Microsoft has shown similar surface-computing-type demos at a handful of other conferences and events.The Microsoft Research team has developed a number of different so-called “surface-computing” and touch-interface projects over the a long time,
Office 2007 Download, including “Touchlight” and “Play Anywhere.”Touchlight is technology developed by Microsoft Research that enables gesture-based navigation. In 2006, Microsoft decided to make Touchlight available for licensing by third-party developers as part of its IP Ventures licensing strategy.PlayAnywhere is, according to Microsoft;s description, a “compact interactive tabletop projection-vision system.” Microsoft;s PlayAnywhere prototype includes a projector, camera with infrared pass filter and infred LED device. Microsoft showed off a PlayAnywhere-type demo during a keynote by Chief Research and Strategy Officer Craig Mundie at the Windows Hardware Engineering Conference in Los Angeles in mid-May 2007.PlayTable seems to be an offshoot of these projects. PlayTable is not a pure research project, but an incubated one, inside Microsoft;s Entertainment and Devices Division — the group responsible for Microsoft;s Xbox, Zune and mobile devices products.Microsoft is hardly the only vendor/researcher working on ways to bring surface computing to the masses.At the TED 2006 conference,
Cheap Office 2010, New York University researcher Jeff Han demonstrated a high-resolution multi-touch computer screen that looked very similar to the PlayTable prototypes that have been spotted in the wild. (Han has since gone on to found a company,
Microsoft Office 2007 Product Key, Perceptive Pixel, to further develop this technology.)Hardware makers like Hewlett-Packard and Philips have publicly and independently demonstrated their own approaches to delivering surface-computing and gesture-recognition. Eon Reality, the 3D and virtual-reality software vendor which licensed Microsoft;s Touchlight technologies last year, offers a product called Eon Touchlight.