Leap Motion Teams Up With Best Buy As Exclusive Retail Launch Partner, Pre-Orders Start In February

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Leap Motion, makers of the innovative Leap Motion controller for PCs, today announced that at launch, it will sell its device exclusively through Best Buy’s physical and online stores in the U.S., as the only other sales channel for the device besides its own website. Leap Motion will also be available soon for pre-order from Best Buy beginning in February, and will come to Europe and other world markets through other partners not yet announced.

I spoke with Leap Motion President and COO Andy Miller about the arrangement, and asked him why Best Buy represented a good fit for the hardware startup. Miller said that Best Buy had been very excited at the prospect of selling Leap’s controller, which can track a computer user’s movements with a high degree of accuracy and no lag time.

“They had been following our progress, and they invited us up to Minneapolis and they got their hands on the Leap Motion, and they decided that this was for them,” he said. “They’re a pretty forward-thinking company and we love the way they can tell the story. It’s really about partnering with someone who has the training to show off to potential customers what we can do.”

Miller added that for Best Buy, the value is in helping the company to show its consumers that it is still on the cutting edge, and capable of bringing them the latest in consumer interaction design. Leap Motion will be working with Best Buy to craft in-store end cap displays, which will feature the controller and games and apps selected by both the retailer and the hardware maker specifically to show off the device’s capabilities. The fact that this deal makes for a great software showcase was also at the forefront of Leap’s decision-making in going with Best Buy as a launch partner.

“It’s not just a startup with a website where we’ve been fortunate to have a lot of interest; now, people will be able to see the apps they build for the Leap platform in stores all across the U.S.,” he said. “There’s going to be a huge audience for developers here. Developers have a choice about where they spend their time and money, and we’re trying to make a strong case for why they should do it at Leap.”

Another launch-time move from Leap is its recently announced partnership with Asus to ship the controller with new PCs in 2013. That, too, is a way for the company to prove to potential developers that far from being vaporware or a niche product, this is intended as a mass market device, and will have all the distribution efforts that kind of project implies. The Best Buy partnership is also a key ingredient for getting Leap Motion somewhere where users can actually try before they buy, which is absolutely crucial for this kind of device coming new to market without the power of a big brand like Microsoft or Sony.

The Best Buy arrangement is a limited time exclusive, and Miller said Leap fully intends to offer the controller through other retailers as well in the future. Pre-orders for those who signed up via Leap’s website are expected to ship out sometime later this quarter.

Asus Teams Up With Leap Motion

leap Asus Teams Up With Leap MotionEager to start the year with a big bang, Leap Motion announced today that it has partnered with Asus to integrate its advanced motion-sensing technology into the Taiwanese giant’s computers. Via press release, the startup company said that Asus will bundle its very own revolutionary Leap Motion controller with select new computers, particularly new high-end notebooks and premium All-in-One (AiO) PCs this year. (more…)

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Asus Is Putting Sick 3D Gesture Controls in Its PCs This Year

Leap Motion’s amazing-looking gesture control debuted last May, and has had developers crawling all over it ever since. Now, Asus has announced that it’s teaming up with the company to produce a range of computers using the tech—and they should be here this year. More »

Leap Motion Raises $30M More For Its Gesture-Based Controller, Announces Bundling Deal With Asus

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Leap Motion is announcing today that it has raised $30 million in Series B funding. Co-founder and CEO Michael Buckwald told me that the company is still planning to ship its gesture-based controller sometime during the first quarter of this year, and he’s also announcing a partnership with Asus that should help get Leap Motion into the hands of consumers.

This is just one of the first in a number of deals that the company has in the works with manufacturers and retailers, Buckwald said. In this case, Asus is supposed to bundle the Leap Motion controller with its All-In-One PCs and high-end notebooks. Buckwald said he’ll have other bundling partnerships to announce, as well as deals with other manufacturers to integrate or embed the company’s products: “That’s a huge part of our distribution strategy.”

Why is this appealing to a manufacturer like Asus? Buckwald argued that it’s because Leap Motion can help turn PCs into exciting platforms again. (Though to be clear, he also plans to expand beyond PCs.) Unless they’re serious gamers, most people aren’t taking advantage of the computing power at their command, he said: “They use a tiny fraction of a very powerful processor — they browse the Internet or they use a word processor.” But by allowing users to interact directly with applications by just moving their fingers or hands, Buckwald said that Leap Motion makes a number of “computationally intensive” tasks more accessible — for example, there are apps that allow users to edit music with their hands.

In fact, the company says that that more than 40,000 developers have signed up to develop Leap Motion applications, with 12,000 developer units of the controller already shipped.

Right now, President and COO Andy Miller (a former VP in Apple’s iAd program, as well as co-founder at mobile ad network Quattro) said he’s seeing a mix between existing apps that are adding gesture-based controls and others that are built specifically for Leap Motion.

“As [the Leap Motion] app store matures, we’ll start to see the ratio shift towards apps that are built from the ground up, that are created and designed with this in mind,” Miller said.

You can see the controller in action in the (old-ish) demo video below. It’s supposed to be “iPod-sized,” while creating a 3D interaction space of 8 cubic feet around the user. The company says that the controller tracks individual hands and fingers at a rate of 290 frames per second and can register movements of 1/100th of a millimeter “with no visible lag time.”

This kind of interface sounds exciting, but also like something that might be challenging for consumers to get used to. Buckwald acknowledged that some education might be required, but he said that will happen through “consumers seeing the amazing apps that people have built on top of the platform.” Miller added that in the company’s tests, “it takes a user literally seconds to figure out where to place their hands.”

The combined interest from consumers, retailers, and manufacturers is the reason for the new funding, Buckwald said. Almost all of money will go towards creating new inventory, so that Leap Motion can ship “hundreds of thousands to millions of units.”

The funding comes from existing backers. Buckwald said that selecting the investors for the round was a competitive process, but ultimately the firms who had invested previously won out. One difference this time around — where Highland Capital Partners led the $12.75 million Series A (and participated in the current round), the Series B was led by Founders Fund.

Leap Motion taps former Apple iAd VP Andy Miller to be President and COO

Leap Motion taps former Apple iAd VP Andy Miller to be President and CEOApple’s former iAd VP (and Quattro co-founder) Andy Miller only just took a job as a general partner at Highland Capital last year after leaving the gang in Cupertino, but he’s now already moving on to another fairly high profile gig. Leap Motion has announced today that Miller will become its new President and CEO COO, placing him in a central role at a company that’s facing the rather difficult task of actually delivering the goods after wowing most everyone with its new gesture control technology. As Fortune notes, however, the move doesn’t come as a complete surprise. Highland Capital is backing Leap, and Miller himself has reportedly been spending about 80 percent of his time on the company over the past few months. In a statement, Miller said that he’s “been fortunate to work with some of the most influential figures and companies in the technology industry, and I’m as excited about the Leap as I’ve ever been about a technology,” adding that the “potential for the Leap is limitless, as it is going to fundamentally change the way we interact with so many devices in our lives.”

Update: Leap Motion has reached out and informed us that Miller will be President and COO, reporting to current CEO and co-founder Michael Buckwald. The official press release can be found after the break.

Continue reading Leap Motion taps former Apple iAd VP Andy Miller to be President and COO

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