Upcoming Kinect Development Kit Could Change In-Store Shopping

The Xbox Kinect is Microsoft’s big push into motion-controlled gaming. You don’t even need a controller to play. Just move your hands and feet with gestures that the Kinect understands, and — voilà! — you’re kicking footballs, competing in dance challenges, and shooting down bad guys.

But now, one year since its launch, the Kinect has gone way beyond video games. It could change our retail buying experiences, and reinvent the way we shop.

A commercial version of the Kinect software development kit will be made available in early 2012, Microsoft announced on Monday, opening the door for businesses to create new applications for the popular platform.

“With the Kinect for Windows commercial program, Microsoft hopes that visionaries all over the globe will continue to transform the way we do things with new Kinect-enabled tools,” a Microsoft spokesperson told Wired.com in a statement. Microsoft is currently running a pilot program with more than 200 businesses across more than 20 countries, including partners like Toyota, textbook publisher Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, and digital advertising agency Razorfish.

If all goes as planned, we could see Kinect-based interactions show up at retailers, banks, automotive dealers and other commercial environments. Razorfish, for example, is looking at building kiosks in which customers’ bodies would be scanned in order to try on digital outfits without needing to take off any clothes — so said Razorfish VP of emerging tech Jonathan Hull in an interview with Kotaku. Other applications could include simpler tasks, such as waving one’s hands to navigate an ATM’s menu screens.

Microsoft previously released a non-commercial version of its Kinect SDK in June, encouraging hackers and open software enthusiasts to create off-beat, innovative applications that take advantage of the platform’s motion-sensing capabilities. From gimmicky motion controls for banking software to NSF grant-backed medical research, the non-commercial SDK spurred creative uses of the platform beyond what Microsoft expected.

Kinect first debuted in November of 2010 to much fanfare. The system eschews the traditional button-and-joystick controller scheme, and instead lets users navigate and play games via hands-free motion capture. The system was an instant hit, setting a Guinness World Record for the fastest-selling consumer device ever in the first few days after its release. In March, Microsoft announced it had sold more than 10 million Kinect devices.

Though the hands-free controller has been a fun novelty for gaming enthusiasts, the Kinect’s utility for hardware-modding enthusiasts has been more compelling. The Xbox peripheral is packed with a bevy of sophisticated motion-capturing instruments, including an infrared light emitter to capture the surfaces of items in a room, and a depth camera that builds a 3D model of all the objects captured by infrared.

The Kinect’s relatively low $150 price tag has been even more attractive for budding DIY-ers. Willow Garage — the Silicon Valley robotics outfit known for its robot control operating system — now offers a $500 open-source robotics kit that incorporates the Kinect. The company’s previous version (also pre-Kinect) cost $280,000.

The initial forays into Kinect modification began with the homebrew modding community, spurring a wave of creative software hacks that ranged from Street Fighter games to the intricacies of “boob physics.” (Yes, really.)

Instead of taking action against the hackers or trying to bar hardware nerds from further Kinect mods, Microsoft encouraged development, promising to eventually release SDKs to new segments of would-be Kinect hackers. “Kinect represents the first incarnation of the next big thing in computing — a world where computing is becoming more natural and intuitive,” a Microsoft spokesperson told Bloomberg Businessweek in a statement.

Kinect’s natural progression is to move into the commercial realm. Much like app developers for Apple’s iOS and Google’s Android, the release of the commercial SDK allows third parties to use Microsoft’s technology in bolstering their own brands and services. Partners, however, would use Microsoft’s hardware to augment their own businesses — this rather than providing content to a centralized store. In return, Microsoft would open itself up to untold numbers of potential new hardware purchasing partners.

David Dennis, group program manager of Microsoft’s Xbox team, told Kotaku that Kinect devices could be sold in bulk numbers — the “tens of thousands” — to partner businesses.

Microsoft hasn’t released any hard details on the commercial SDK’s release date beyond “early next year.” So don’t expect to start waving on digital fashion accessories right away.


Concept Pen Measures Its Own Lines, Makes Its Own Power

The Electronic Pen measures the rotation of its ball to determine line length

The Electronic Pen tells you just how much ink it has laid down, by distance. While it might be fun to know that your signature is exactly 13.37cm long, there are more practical uses, too.

For instance, you could use Jang Hyung-Jin’s concept pen to measure lines as you draw them, effectively turning any straight edge into a ruler. Better, you can measure around corners.

It could also be fun for learning. Everybody knows that the circumference of a circle is the diameter times pi, but it’s pretty cool to use this pen to draw that circle and have the math confirmed.

The pen even has a few neat physical design features. One is the curved side which protects the LED screen inside a concave cranny. The other is some mysterious interior mechanism that powers the whole thing as it moves.

And no, this pen may never make it into the real world, but that doesn’t mean its not worth clicking through to the project page and seeing the rather suggestive diagram showing just how to charge it.

Meter Pen [Yanko]

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Dual Case Holds Two iPads Side-By-side

Double trouble: ZooGue’s Dual case holds two iPads side-by-side

Double the iPads, double the fun! Or at least, double the chance of using the iPad to get any work done. At least, that’s the promise of ZooGue’s Dual iPad 2 Case.

The Dual iPad case is pretty much just a longer version of the ZooGue’s Genius, a good but bulky leather foilio-style iPad case. The Dual Case holds two tablets side-by-side, has a fold-out, Velcro-secured kickstand, a band to mount it to car headrests and covers with magnets to sleep and wake the iPads within.

You might scoff, but when I need to get some work done on an iPad, the best companion is another iPad. You can use one as a source and one to do the writing on. If you’re an author, or editing photos or video or music, you probably need just one, but for blogging one screen leads to frustration.

Of course, an actual computer is even better, especially if you start connecting bluetooth keyboards to your iPads too.

But it really doesn’t matter, as the Dual Case is a more of a gimmick. Available only as a limited edition, the cases are being auctioned for charity, with proceeds going to the the Alabama Autism Assistance Program.

Also, check out the reviews on the product page. My favorite, from Lord Michaelton of Raspberry Falls, begins thusly:

Don’t get me wrong, it’s a lovingly designed product, but what the heck am I supposed to do with my third iPad?

Dual iPad 2 Case Limited Edition [ZooGue]

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Pioneer’s Bike GPS Costs More Than Your Phone, Does Much Less

Contrary to the promise of its name, Pioneer’s Potternavi will not help you find platform 9 3⁄4

What sits on the handlebars of your bike, has GPS, an accelerometer, and LCD screen and ten hours of battery life? Nope, it’s not your smartphone — it’s the Potternavi, a specialized bike GPS from Pioneer.

The trouble is, it’s worse than your phone in almost every way. If we ignore the fact that you can’t do anything with it other than navigation and bike computering, and it still looks bad. The display is a tiny 2.4 inches, with 240 x 320 resolution, and the battery life isn’t much better than you get from a phone. Worse, when it launches in Japan next February, it’ll cost over $500.

On the plus side, it has built-in ANT+ support for hooking up wirelessly to cadence and power meters, and the price includes two years of cellular network access.

But the best part is the name, Potternavi. It’s not, as you would be forgiven for thinking, a device to navigate the Harry Potter universe. The name comes from the activity of “pottering,” or “puttering” as you call it across the pond. Who can’t love a device devoted to “occupying oneself in a desultory but pleasant way”?

Potternavi press release [Pioneer via AVWatch]

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World’s Manliest iPhone Case Made From Truck Tires and Pool Tables

This case is made from old truck tire tubes and pool-table felt. I can almost smell the testosterone

Regular readers will know that I’m a sucker for bags and cases of all kinds (the Lady has implemented a one-in-one-out policy at home, meaning I have to dispose of an old bag before buying a new one). I’m also a fan of recycling things, especially inner-tubes. Even so, Karen Booker’s iPhone and iPod Touch sleeve goes one better.

This super-tough and slick-looking sleeve is sewn from old rubber truck tubes, but the coolest part is the lining, made from green baize reclaimed from pool tables.

I have a man-purse (or murse. Or as we say over in Europe, a “bag”) made from old truck tubes and it is tough as boots and ages like leather. So If I wasn’t the kind to go commando with my phone, I’d likely pick up this case. And what in the world could be more manly than truck tires and pool?

Booker’s sleeves cost $22, and are available now from her Etsy store, along with a bunch of other recycled bags and cases.

IPhone and iPod touch Sleeve Sculpted from Recycled Truck Tire [Etsy via Werd]

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Wahoo Fitness Pack Turns iPhone Into Personal Trainer

Wahoo’s Run/Gym Pack is a great place to start for prospective fitness nerds

Fitness apps for the iPhone aren’t exactly thin on the ground. Hit up the App Store and you’ll see a confusion of GPS-enabled trackers for running, biking and probably even skipping. What is slightly less common is hardware that lets these apps do more than simply tell you how far and fast you were.

Wahoo, which sounds like something Mario might shout in his more recent outings, is a “run/gym pack” which includes a heart-rate belt and companion dongle that slots into the dock port. It works with Wahoo’s own free app, but will also play nice with most any other fitness app or measuring device on the market thanks to its industry standard ANT+ integration.

The best thing about heart-rate monitor (apart from letting you go all “bondage chic” in the summer as you strap it around your naked chest) is that you can more accurately determine calories burned. Plain GPS trackers guess at this, but they’re often horribly inaccurate. With a heart-rate monitor, you can correctly determine the exact amount of donuts needed to redress your energy inbalance.

The new run pack costs $110-$130, and is available now.

Run/Gym Pack [Wahoo. Thanks, Brad!]

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IRIS 9000, A HAL-Alike Controller Dock for iPhone 4S and Siri

ThinkGeek’s IRIS 9000 turns your iPhone 4S into HAL

I don’t know how they keep doing it, but noveltyware purveyors ThinkGeek have just knocked another one out of the park. And I for one welcome the new IRIS 9000 voice control module for Siri, which pretty much turns your iPhone 4S into HAL 9000.

The module consists of a dock with speaker, microphone and ominous glowing red eye. It also comes with a small remote. Hit the button on the remote and Siri is triggered from afar, allowing you to ask her to set a timer for your broiling steak without greasing up your iPhone with beef fat and bacteria.

The IRIS (Siri backwards) speaker then amplifies Siri’s answer, and the red LED flickers along with her voice.

At just $60, it’s hard to come up with a reason not to buy this. However, there is bad news. Don’t worry — the pod bay doors are still open. The problem is that these won’t be shipping until 2012, although you can pre-order today.

IRIS 9000 voice control module for iPhone & Siri [ThinkGeek]

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Quickfix Emergency Bike Fenders

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Where I live, it doesn’t rain much, so you can get away running a bike without fenders, or mudguards. When it does rain here in my part of Spain, though, the heavens open and you can get a day or two of torrential storms.

Most people would just stay in, but where’s the fun in that? And that’s where Full Windsor’s Quickfix and FoldnFix fenders come in. Both of these are quick and easily mounted, and fold flat to fit in a bag. The FoldnFix attaches using cable ties, but the Quickfix is much more interesting.

The Quickfix is an origami-like fender which starts out flat and then folds to fit through the seat stays and stay stiff. Once in place, it is secured by press studs, and can therefore be removed easily when you’re done.

Fittingly, the company is based in London, the capital of rainy England (although not the rain capital of England, which is arguably Manchester).

If you ride a lot in the rain, you should probably use full fenders with mud flaps. Not only will they keep you dry, they’ll protect the bike’s drivetrain and headset from filthy, gritty road spray.

Full Windsor is in negotiations right now to find resellers, and should be available soon.

FoldnFix and Quickfix product page [Full Windsor via Bike Biz]

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‘Tha Business’: Self Defense Kit for Suits

Take down aggressors in style with this handy, wallet-sized weapon kit

Protecting yourself was never so stylish. Look good whilst messing people up with Hoang Nguyen and Anh Nguyen’s Tha Business, a designer self-defense kit.

As every action movie fan already knows, the best defense is offense, which is why Tha Business’ feature list reads like the contents of an urban ninja’s purse.

Inside the box you’ll find wallet-friendly, credit-card sized versions of pepper spray, brass knuckles, whistles and pocket knives. You also get a couple of pens, presumably for poking people in the eyes.

The imperiled owner simply slides the appropriate card from the deck and takes down their assailant. The concept is slightly tongue-in-cheek, and no part is funnier than the promo poster, featuring an American Red Cross Special Edition.

Tha Business [Creative Session via Yanko and Bruce Sterling]

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Ch-ch-ch-Changes: Apple Reshuffles Smart Cover Lineup, Axes Orange

Before and after. Orange disappears just in time for pumpkin season

If you want an orange Smart Cover for your iPad 2, you’d better hurry to a third-party reseller and buy one now — Apple has discontinued the fruit-flavored plastic cover in a reshuffle of the Smart Cover lineup.

As you can see in the before and after picture above, the presumably unpopular orange has gone, replaced by a dark gray polyurethane version. This means that the dull and unadventurous buyer will no longer be forced to pay for an expensive leather cover if they want to express their inner insipidness.

The pink, green and blue covers seem to have been brightened up a little, but that may just be the product shot.

If you don’t already have a Smart Cover, I recommend a plastic one. They can be scrubbed clean both sides with soap and water, and they don’t cost $70.

Smart Cover product page [Apple]

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