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View Full Version : Amazing Technology - Microsoft Multi-Touchscreen ( Milan )


Scannerlight
July 16th, 2007, 01:09 AM
Think of Minority Report, check the video and think in another 5 to 10 years where technology will be headed. This video shows some amazing new ways to interact with your camera, photos, easy communication across countries, games, business presentations, quick and easy access and control over lots of data... you name it. The ability to not only interact with the touchscreen by pressing a button but to control objects and files to a vast extent as well as the ability to allow multiple users to interact with the surface and the marketing abilities for this technology is really amazing.

Video of the Microsoft Touchscreen in Action (http://link.brightcove.com/services/link/bcpid932579976/bclid932553050/bctid933742930)

"So you could, for instance, walk into a T-Mobile store, pick up a phone you're considering buying and place it on the Surface. The table could then either link with the phone via Bluetooth or scan a code imprinted on the packaging to identify it. Suddenly, the phone is surrounded by graphical information (pricing, features, etc.). After selecting a service plan and any accessories, you just run your credit card through a reader built into the table (or, when RFID cards have become the norm, just slap your card on the tabletop) and your new phone is paid for. By the time you open the package, everything is set up — all without talking to a single employee.

It's easy to dismiss the concept as pure novelty — and at first it may well be. But ask yourself: When was the last time you made a bank withdrawal from a human teller? The Surface machine is networked and infinitely flexible. You could use it to order food in a restaurant. While you wait, you could play games or surf the Internet, and then eat off its surface. And every table in the joint could be a jukebox, a television or a billboard for advertising. (You didn't think advertisers would miss out on this, did you?)

And once you've gotten used to ordering calamari through a tabletop at your favorite eatery, you may want to use it to call up recipes on your kitchen counter. Surface machines will cost $5000 to $10,000 at launch, but as prices fall, similar devices may find their way into the home. "We view its migration as similar to that of plasma TVs," says Pete Thompson, Microsoft's general manager for surface computing. "People will see it in public spaces like bars and restaurants and want to expand it into other environments." Its current coffee-table shape could evolve into a Pottery Barn-style catalog of computerized furniture — a dining room table, a wall-mounted panel, a desk or practically any surface. "It's a platform that can be put into various form factors," Thompson says. "This is a way to put technology into a piece of wood."

Magic Man
July 16th, 2007, 08:45 AM
Alright...that is just too fucking cool.

Interceptor
July 16th, 2007, 08:52 AM
I remember when they showed that interactive computer demo like this at the T.E.D. conference last year. Amazing to see it applied so practically. I'm excited to see what it could do for something like painter or photoshop.

Jason Rainville
July 16th, 2007, 09:18 AM
Revolutionary! (http://youtube.com/watch?v=CZrr7AZ9nCY) <-click

JAG.
July 16th, 2007, 10:09 AM
this 'new' technology is popping up all over the place from many different tech companies. its freakin awesome, i dont care who makes it just hurry up and get it on the shelves for crap's sake.. - JAG

Bowlin
July 16th, 2007, 03:41 PM
I'm excited to see what it could do for something like painter or photoshop.

Exactly. If you could use actual paint brushes on it.... I think it would revolutionize digital art.

ChaoticKnight
July 16th, 2007, 04:53 PM
I remember seeing an interface like this that someone was playing Warcraft 3 on. This would be awesome with art!! Man...... I need money! O_o lol

GriNGo
July 16th, 2007, 06:25 PM
I really hope the surface can be put on a wall as well, and I hope it can be much bigger than the one shown in the video.

sciboy
July 16th, 2007, 07:17 PM
I'll show interest once it's portable.

Interceptor
July 16th, 2007, 07:51 PM
I'll show interest once it's portable.

Why? So you can drag and enlarge picture on something the size of a blackberry? or navigate google maps by touch on something as small as your cell phone? I think this thing is best as a stationary tool. It's size is where alot of the advantage comes from. Wireless media transfer would be usless if this was a portable device as well.. you'd transfer photos and movies from a camera to an MS multi touch tool that was just the same size? This this as I see it is meant for business men gathering around the meeting table and dumping files back and forth to eachother with the greatest ease... or having familly over and being able to toss back vacation photos and let everythign manipulate and views whatever images they want as they see fit...

Scannerlight
July 17th, 2007, 12:18 AM
Interceptor is right, this is clearly going to be a stationary device as the one guy even mentions in a video about the size being important. There are other videos that show uses for military purposes, for warfare, museums, zoos, home theater, for businesses and restaurants. They mention the uses of presentations for storyboarding for films, and the way you can quickly access diagrams and information zooming in to one picture and backing out of a 1000 image chart to a birds eye view. You can visually see someones hands in another country as they interact with an object on your screen.

These are not just "coffee table" surfaces but can be mounted on walls at the size of chalk boards as mentioned by perceptive pixels. Perhaps it won't be affordable or even useful to the everyday working man but this is just a start to what is possible.
Video 2 (http://link.brightcove.com/services/link/bcpid936988771/bclid933081120/bctid933203849)
Video 3 (http://link.brightcove.com/services/link/bcpid626910332/bctid626936419)

0kelvin
July 17th, 2007, 12:52 AM
Why? So you can drag and enlarge picture on something the size of a blackberry? or navigate google maps by touch on something as small as your cell phone? I think this thing is best as a stationary tool. It's size is where alot of the advantage comes from. Wireless media transfer would be usless if this was a portable device as well.. you'd transfer photos and movies from a camera to an MS multi touch tool that was just the same size? This this as I see it is meant for business men gathering around the meeting table and dumping files back and forth to eachother with the greatest ease... or having familly over and being able to toss back vacation photos and let everythign manipulate and views whatever images they want as they see fit...
You just described the iPhone.



Eric

Joshua Fountain
July 17th, 2007, 01:09 AM
I've seen that technology before. If you look up "multitouchreel experiments" among some other keywords as well you can find all sorts of information and videos (some just absolutely outstanding when it comes to image manipulation) on it.

Kind of dissapointed Microsoft got their hands on it. Had to happen sooner or later though. I was hoping another computer company would come out with a proper multi touch interface OS that would offer some real competition to MS. Oh well, I wonder how much Microsoft payed the many developers of this technology for the rights to use it in their operating systems?

And yes, it will do fantastic things for art. Not just graphic art either, but I'm thinking the real pluses will come in architectural design.