Want to plug Microsoft’s motion-sensing Kinect camera directly into your Windows 7 PC? Now you can: Microsoft’s made the Kinect for Windows SDK beta available for download, gratis, and you can get it ...
Microsoft has released a new version of its SDK to developers that are making applications that work with the recently launched Kinect for Windows v2 motion gesture hardware sensor. The update ...
Microsoft has yet to provide an exact launch date, but it will allow companies to use Kinect for commercial purposes starting sometime in early 2012. CNET contributor Don Reisinger is a technology ...
Rumour has it Microsoft will release a software development kit for Kinect for Windows this week. WinRumors reports Microsoft will announce the SDK during a live-streamed Channel 9 event on Thursday.
Today, Microsoft announced it will release a non-commercial Kinect for Windows software development kit from Microsoft Research later this spring. The intent of releasing a “starter kit” for ...
Microsoft today released the final Kinect for Windows SDK 2.0, which you can download now for free directly from Microsoft.com. The launch means developers can now finalize their apps for the Kinect ...
Kinect for Windows will be made available in China on October 8, Microsoft has announced, and it will be available in the following six additional markets this fall: Chile, Colombia, the Czech ...
If you’re waiting for Microsoft’s official do-it-yourself motion-sensing PC kit, you won’t have to wait much longer. Microsoft says the Kinect for Windows software development kit (beta) will ship ...
With Kinect already being used to develop applications for health care and other industries, a commercial version of the Kinect for Windows SDK is being prepared for a rollout in early 2012. The ...
The Kinect for Windows Software Development Kit (SDK) 2.0 enables developers to create applications that support gesture and voice recognition, using Kinect sensor technology on computers running ...
The Kinect for Windows SDK 2.0 public preview will run only on Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 64-bit systems. For those of you who develop on Macs, fret not; there are options for you, writes Carmine ...
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 ...
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