Posts Tagged ‘Windows’

Kinect for Windows 1.5 Released With Facial, Skeletal Tracking

May 22nd, 2012

Microsoft today released version 1.5 of the Kinect for Windows runtime and SDK, and made Kinect for Windows hardware available in four more countries.

The updated release adds several capabilities intended to help developers use the Kinect sensor in new and intriguing ways. That includes Kinect Studio, which will let developers record, playback, and debug clips of users engaging with their apps. There’s also improved tracking – from facial features to seated skeletal tracking.

The Face Tracking SDK “provides a real-time 3D mesh of facial features—tracking the head position, location of eyebrows, shape of the mouth, etc.,” Microsoft said in a blog post.

Seated Skeletal Tracking, meanwhile, “tracks a 10-joint head/shoulders/arms skeleton, ignoring the leg and hip joints.” It’s not restricted to seating positions, which Microsoft said will allow developers to create seating-optimized apps (in offices, for example) or standing apps that only focus on the upper body (like kiosks).

“Skeletal Tracking is supported in Near Mode, including both Default and Seated tracking modes,” Microsoft said. “This allows businesses and developers to create applications that track skeletal movement at closer proximity, like when the end user is sitting at a desk or needs to stand close to an interactive display.”

Microsoft also promised updated guidelines for natural user interface development, and significant additions to sample code and SDK documentation.

The update also brings new language support for speech recognition: French, Spanish, Italian, and Japanese. There are also new language packs that help distinguish the way a language is spoken in different regions.

Meanwhile, Kinect for Windows hardware, which will set you back $249, is now available in Hong Kong, South Korea, Singapore, and Taiwan. Next month, it will also come to Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Denmark, Finland, India, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United Arab Emirates.

“As we have worked with customers large and small over the past months, we’ve seen the value in having a fully integrated approach: the Kinect software and hardware are designed together; audio, video, and depth are all fully supported and integrated; our sensor, drivers, and software work together to provide world class echo cancellation; our approach to human tracking, which is designed in conjunction with the Kinect sensor, works across a broad range of people of all shapes, sizes, clothes, and hairstyles, etc,” Microsoft said. “And because we design the hardware and software together, we are able to make changes that open up exciting new areas for innovation, like Near Mode.”

The Kinect for Windows 1.0 SDK made its debut in early February in 12 countries. The offering is intended to take the Kinect sensor technology beyond entertainment and use it for things like healthcare. Microsoft first tipped the 1.5 SDK in April, promising a release by the end of May.

Source:http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2404694,00.asp

Microsoft Looks Back At The Path Of Windows, Waves Goodbye To Aero

May 21st, 2012

Windows 8 is coming this year. At this point, it’s accepted. It’s almost taken for granted. But building an entire operating system is an insane job, and doing it time and time again is even crazier. Microsoft has been pounding away at desktop OSes for years, and with Win8 on the horizon, the company recently took a step back to show where it’s at, where it’s going and how we got here. In a new MSDN post entitled ‘Creating the Windows 8 user experience,’ the company lays out some of the vital UI changes from Windows 1 to Windows 7, and what its engineers learned along the way. A lot of evolution has happened over the years, and it’s obvious just looking back at the home screens from each system.

Focusing more on the here and now, the company admits that it is “moving beyond Aero, flattening surfaces, removing reflections, and scaling back distracting gradients.” So, largely, Aero won’t be a part of Windows 8. The company says that while that was en vogue in the past, we’re beyond it now. And while much of the Metro style UI uses white text on a colorful saturated background, the desktop in Windows 8 will continue to use black text on light-colored chrome, as in Windows 7. This choice was made, according to Microsoft, to help preserve maximum compatibility with existing programs. Interesting in hearing more from the brains that designed Win8?

Listen up:

“We applied the principles of “clean and crisp” when updating window and taskbar chrome. Gone are the glass and reflections. We squared off the edges of windows and the taskbar. We removed all the glows and gradients found on buttons within the chrome. We made the appearance of windows crisper by removing unnecessary shadows and transparency. The default window chrome is white, creating an airy and premium look. The taskbar continues to blend into the desktop wallpaper, but appears less complicated overall.

To complete the story, we updated the appearance of most common controls, such as buttons, check boxes, sliders, and the Ribbon. We squared off the rounded edges, cleaned away gradients, and flattened the control backgrounds to align with our chrome changes. We also tweaked the colors to make them feel more modern and neutral. While a few of these visual changes are hinted at in the upcoming Release Preview, most of them will not yet be publicly available. You’ll see them all in the final release of Windows 8!”

One thing strikes us here: Microsoft is clearly listening to consumers. We live in a social world, and input is easier to give and easier to receive than ever before. Windows 8 is going to be a tough one, bridging the gap between a “traditional” desktop OS and a Metro universe, but it’s clear that the company is eager to listen and eager to deliver something compelling. Just a few more months, and it’ll be out in the wide open.

Source:http://hothardware.com/News/Microsoft-Looks-Back-At-The-Path-Of-Windows-Waves-Goodbye-To-Aero/

HP keeping quiet on newest Windows

May 18th, 2012

There was an elephant in the room at Hewlett-Packard’s Global Influencers Summit in Shanghai.

It was called Windows 8.

HP talked up a new line of thin and light notebook computers called Ultrabooks and Sleekbooks, all running strategic partner Microsoft’s three-year-old Windows 7 operating system, completely ignoring the imminent release of Windows 8.

The new flavour of the world’s most popular operating system introduces a new, touch-sensitive user interface called Metro, based on the Windows Phone 7 platform’s user interface, and it is the biggest rebuild of the Windows operating system in nearly 20 years.

The exact release date of Windows 8 is a closely held secret, and nobody at HP was telling in Shanghai.

“Ask Microsoft,” they said. But an October release would not be a surprise, particularly because Microsoft has moved its annual Tech Ed software developer’s conference in Auckland from August to September this year.

HP’s personal systems group president Todd Bradley had flown to China to talk about the company’s new range, which was mainly in the slim and light form factor and All in One (AiO)-style touchsmart Windows 7 machines. He didn’t want to talk about the upcoming Windows 8 just yet, other than to say HP was building touch-sensitive tablet computers for the new operating system for business users.

Hardly a surprise. I have heard many businesspeople say they’d hold off buying an iPad until they have seen what Windows 8 will offer on a slate computer.

So what does this all mean for consumers? Well, if I was in the market for a new machine I’d definitely set my sights on one of the thin and light Ultrabook models with one of Intel’s new superfast third-general Ivy Bridge central processor units and solid-state hard disk drives. Those I have already tested have out-performed my two-year-old HP Pavilion DV6 laptop with start-up times of just seconds.

And they are super sleek and sexy.

Which leaves consumers who want to upgrade with a choice. Go with the tried and true Windows 7 environment – it really is the best version of Windows so far and I’ve been using it since Windows 3.1 in 1992 – or wait until the last quarter and give Windows 8 a spin. There’s a free consumer preview available for download, but it’s incomplete, so we’ll have to wait and see if the full version eclipses Windows 7.

It’s likely, from what HP said at its summit, that it will hold back from releasing touch-sensitive slim and light machines until well after Windows 8 hits the shelves. Which means anyone buying a thin and light Windows 7 machine from its new range could be just as well off, from a technological point of view, buying Windows 8 when it hits the shelves, if not from a financial perspective.

Another option is to wait until Microsoft starts offering its inevitable free Windows 8 upgrade to anyone who buys a Windows 7 device in the months leading up to the new operating system’s release. I’m still waiting to hear back from Microsoft as to when that will be.One unconfirmed report suggests Microsoft will charge Windows 7 users $15 to upgrade to Windows 8.

In the meantime, if you want a touch sensitive machine, one of HP’s new All In One devices might fit the bill.

Source:http://www.stuff.co.nz/technology/digital-living/6939708/HP-keeping-quiet-on-newest-Windows

Microsoft Gives Windows a Clean Sweep

May 16th, 2012

For a long time, some Microsoft officials have privately griped that PC makers don’t present Windows in its best light. They clutter desktops with icons that are often little more than ads for third-party products; include confusing utilities that duplicate functions already in Windows; require lengthy setup; and configure PCs in ways that slow them down.

For the past few years, Microsoft has been offering streamlined versions of popular PC models that don’t have the extra software, utilities or settings that some consumers feel clutter their desktops. WSJ’s Walt Mossberg tests a couple of these “Signature” PCs.

One consequence, in the eyes of these Microsoft executives, is to confer an advantage on the company’s main operating-system rival, Apple AAPL -0.90% .

Now, Microsoft is doing something about the situation. In a program unknown to most computer users, the company has been using its small chain of retail stores and its online computer store to sell customized versions of popular PC models that have been streamlined for a cleaner look and better performance. It calls these machines “Signature” PCs. They retain the maker’s brand, but sport a special Signature desktop and configuration. And they cost about the same as the identical stock version of the machine sold elsewhere.

Microsoft also offers a program that, for $99, will turn users’ Windows 7 PCs into Signature versions, if the owner brings the computer into one of its 16 stores, due to grow to 21 outlets in coming months. All Signature computers come with 90 days of free phone support, as well as help at the stores’ “Answer Desks,” which are like the Genius Bars at Apple stores.

I’ve been testing three Signature models and comparing them with the same machines as sold elsewhere without the Signature modifications. I found the Signature versions much cleaner and easier to navigate and faster in a variety of tests.

Microsoft
A Folio 13 model PC desktop, as shipped by Hewlett-Packard, shows a cluster of thirdparty software icons.

I’d recommend that prospective Windows PC buyers who live near a Microsoft store, which are mostly in the West, or are willing to shop at the company’s online store, consider a Signature machine. Information on store locations, as well as a link to online PC shopping from Microsoft, is at microsoftstore.com. Information on Signature is at signature.microsoft.com.

Some important caveats are in order. The hardware makers presumably believe, and some consumers may well agree, that the extra software, utilities and settings, which Microsoft removes or buries, are beneficial. Some of these, like offers to join game or music services, may be viewed as welcome bonuses. Others, like customized networking utilities, or launchers for the PC makers’ own media software, may be viewed as better matched to the hardware, or superior to Microsoft’s approach, even though they duplicate Windows functions. Many can be turned off, or removed, by a user with sufficient skill and time.

Also, Microsoft loads Signature machines with its own add-on software, such as its free email, photo and video programs, its Zune music and video program, and a stripped-down “Starter” version of Microsoft Office, that includes only Word and Excel, plus ads, and an offer to buy the full version.

However, the company says the stores will remove any of these a customer doesn’t want and even help the customer install competing software, such as Google’s Chrome browser, or Apple’s iTunes for Windows.

Microsoft
The same PC as sold by Microsoft in its Signature Configuration.

At my request, Microsoft supplied me with before-and-after laptops from Hewlett-Packard, HPQ -2.46% Sony and Samsung 005930.SE -0.23% . Over the past few days, I’ve been comparing the stock and Signature versions, and testing how much time it takes to set them up, start them and restart them in daily use, resume them from sleep, and shut them down.

The Signature desktop, which is labeled “Microsoft Signature,” features a picture of a sunset over a lake as its wallpaper. It contains no icons other than the recycling bin. The Taskbar contains only icons for Internet Explorer, the Explorer file browser, and Microsoft’s free email, photo and moviemaking programs. The system tray, to the right of the Taskbar, contains only the bare minimum of items, such as the network and battery indicators.

Signature machines are also configured with battery, audio and touch-pad settings Microsoft considers optimal. The usual third-party security software—which is typically provided for only 30 to 90 days, makes you go through some setup, and nags you to subscribe—is replaced by Microsoft’s own Security Essentials program, which is free, required no registration or subscription and updates itself automatically.

By contrast, my test H-P Folio 13 had eight icons besides the recycling bin, including several that were come-ons for music and game services. It also featured several H-P utilities.

A Sony EH37FX included an app from Best Buy that launched every time the PC started (though you could turn this off). Both stock machines festooned the IE browser with two space-hogging toolbars, including one from Microsoft’s own Bing search service; the Signature machine had none.

The Digital Solution

Bing Goes Sleek And More Social
The Samsung Series 7 I tested came with 10 extra icons and a bunch of special utilities.

Signature isn’t the same on every machine. In most cases, it strips out some of the added software and utilities, and retains others, but hides them in a folder buried in the Start Menu. In some cases, however, where a utility is deemed essential for a computer’s particular hardware, it retains these.

Such decisions, and indeed all of the Signature settings, are controlled by a team of engineers housed in Microsoft’s retail division.

In my speed tests, Signature beat all the stock machines on all my trials, but the margins weren’t dramatic, usually from a few seconds to 25 seconds. On the H-P, the differences were especially minimal. Across all three machines, the biggest differences were the time it took to set the PC up out of the box and the time it took to shut down the PC.

One Microsoft official told me that Signature represents “Microsoft’s perspective on Windows,” rather than that of the hardware maker.

In my opinion, although it may generally benefit Microsoft at the expense of the hardware maker, it also makes for a better experience for the user.

Source:http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304371504577406242849753100.html

Controlling your Windows PC with your brain is possible

May 11th, 2012

First we had the keyboard and mouse.

Then smartphones popularised the touchscreen movement, and then hardware like the Xbox’s Kinect system made gesture controls feel like second-nature.

Now we are getting ready to enter the world of thought-control, with headsets that can read our minds now available for as little as £300, and the software to turn our dreams into actions starting to take shape.

Kevin Brown, senior inventor at IBM, works to bridge the gap between emerging technology and the practical applications they can offer society.

Already he is working hard to make everyday tasks easier through mind control, using headsets such as the commercially-available Emotiv Systems headset.

The Emotiv headset retails for $299 and can simply be plugged into any recent Windows machine to begin working, with apps and games – including Angry Birds – being adapted by enthusiasts to run with simple mind controls.

Kevin, who has been an IBM for 16 years, said: ‘The current headsets can already pick up a range of sensory input from our brains, and this will only improve over time.

‘The Emotiv Systems set can pick up a range of emotions – currently whether we are bored or excited, and if we are concentrating on a task or if we are relaxed.
‘It can also pick up on what our brain is telling our muscles to do, so it can pick up a smile or a frown, and react accordingly.’

Source:http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2142340/Mind-bending-Controlling-Windows-PC-brain-possible-hardware-shelves.html

How to create custom driver databases with Windows Deployment Services

May 8th, 2012

You can’t work with Windows for long without seeing Plug and Play in action. Insert a USB device and this service gets to work identifying the device, locating its driver, and configuring the resources that get it working.

Plug and Play (PnP) isn’t just for USB devices, though. The concepts surrounding PnP are a central part of the entire Windows experience. Network cards, video cards, just about any peripheral that plugs into Windows sees some measure of bootstrap automation from this handy service.

You can also take advantage of the Plug and Play experience during a Windows installation. In fact, the Windows Preinstallation Environment (WinPE) uses it to automatically locate and install any drivers it has access to on your installation media.

That’s great when that media includes the device drivers you need. If it doesn’t, you can create your own custom driver database with Windows Deployment Services in Windows Server 2008 R2. With a little extra effort, that database will ensure that every driver gets installed before you ever hit Control + Alt + Delete.

Source:http://searchwindowsserver.techtarget.com/tip/How-to-create-custom-driver-databases-with-Windows-Deployment-Services

Your Windows 8 PC May Not Play DVD

May 7th, 2012

One final and possibly unwelcome clarification on media options in Windows 8. If you don’t install Windows 8 Pro and also buy into the Media Center upgrade, your computer may not play DVDs any more.

Microsoft explains its logic in a post on the Building Windows 8 blog. Essentially, with an increasing number of PCs and ultrabooks shipping without a DVD drive, licensing the codecs required to play DVDs for inclusion in Windows Media Player (which every edition of Windows gets) increases the price (by around $2 a copy, Microsoft says). Since online media is now dominating, Microsoft figured cutting out DVD playback makes sense.

That doesn’t necessarily mean you’ll have to pay for an upgrade to get DVDs. Many vendors include licensed DVD playback software on their machines, and many external DVD drives also come with software that includes licensed copies of the codec. (That’s one of the few rational arguments for vendor crapware I’ve ever heard.)

If you have an existing machine running Windows 7 and are planning to upgrade to Windows 8, the situation is a bit hazier:

In other words, you’ll be relying on an OEM manufacturer to update its software, which is an unpredictable scenario.

The big lesson? If you buy a new machine with Windows 8 on it and it includes a DVD drive, check that software is included. Microsoft has made it clear that it won’t be licensing Windows Media Center for shipping on hardware — you’ll have to buy it yourself as an upgrade — so you’ll need to know this before buying if you don’t want unexpected expenses. While VLC is a capable media player and is what we use for DVDs whenever possible, it can have occasional issues with commercial DVDs, so it’s good to have a backup.

Source:http://www.lifehacker.com.au/2012/05/your-windows-8-pc-may-not-play-dvds/

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