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Hardrock69
05-31-2007, 11:19 AM
Microsoft unveils revolutionary device
New top-secret 'Surface' will change the way we look at computing


Today show
By Paul Hochman
Gear and technology editor
TODAY
Updated: 3:03 p.m. CT May 30, 2007

In the next year, Bill Gates will manage one of the highest-profile transitions in American business history — he’ll leave his day job as chairman at Microsoft, the $300 billion company he co-founded 32 years ago, and will move full time into philanthropy.

But before he leaves, Gates has a few more high-tech projects to finish. Until this morning, one project — almost five years in the making and code-named 'Milan,’ — was top-secret.

In a TODAY exclusive, I had a chance to talk with Gates at Microsoft’s Redmond, Wash., campus about a revolutionary new device Microsoft now calls “Surface.”


“Pretty exciting, eh?” Gates said with a sly smile, when he put his hand down on what looked initially like a low, black coffee table: At the touch of his hand, the hard, plastic tabletop suddenly dissolved into what looked like tiny ripples of water. The ‘water’ responded to each of his fingers and the ripples rushed quickly away in every direction.

“Go ahead,” he said. “Try it.” When I placed my hand on the table at the same time, there were more ripples.

It took a moment to appreciate what was happening. Every hand motion Gates or I did was met with an immediate response from the table. There was no keyboard. There was no mouse. Just our gestures.

“All you have to do is reach out and touch the Surface,” Gates told me with barely concealed pride. “And it responds to what you do.”

In an industry whose bold pronouncements about the future have taught me the benefits of skepticism, Surface took my breath away. If the Surface project rollout goes as planned in November, it could alter the way everyday Americans control the technology that currently overwhelms many of us.

After Gates and I spent about 20 minutes taking the device out for a spin, a lot of my preconceived notions about how people interact with computers began to melt away.

TODAY
Microsoft co-founder and chairman Bill Gates talks with TODAY tech editor Paul Hochman while demonstrating his company's new computing device, Surface.

http://msnbcmedia.msn.com/j/msnbc/Components/Photos/070529/070529_PAUL_GATES_vmed_9p.standard.jpg

How it works
The radical new approach starts with the guts of the device itself. Under the impact-resistant plastic top skin on an otherwise nondescript table hide five infrared scanners, a projector and a wireless modem. The scanners recognize objects and shapes placed on the top and respond to them accordingly. For example, if the scanners recognize fingers, and the fingers have been placed in color circles that appear on the surface, the projector shows colored lines that follow the tracings and movements of your fingers. Meanwhile, an internal modem sends and receives signals from any electronic device placed on it. All of the hardware is run by a special version of Microsoft’s new operating system, Windows Vista.

To do things on Surface’s tabletop screen, you reach down, touch it and push it. To make the image you see on the screen bigger, spread your fingers. To make it smaller, squeeze your fingers together. To move something into the trash, push it into the trash with your hand. And it allows what Microsoft calls “Multi-Touch” and “Multi-User” interaction — namely, more than one person can interact with it at a time. Try that with your home computer.

One of the most revolutionary aspects of Surface, though, is its natural interaction with everyday objects and technologies. When you place your Wi-Fi-enabled digital camera on the table, for example, Surface "sees" the camera and does something extraordinary: It pulls your digital pictures and videos out onto the table for you to look at, move, edit or send. Images literally spill out in a pool of color.

The whole thing is remarkably intuitive, says Gates, because it’s remarkably similar to what people do in everyday life. “When you make it so that it's just visual — touch and visual — you're drawing on what humans are incredibly good at,” he said. “You know, what people have been practicing their entire lives. People will start to see that this world of information and entertainment is going to be far more accessible."

The first place you’ll probably see Microsoft Surface is at one of its four inaugural retail partners, including T-Mobile USA, Starwood Hotels and Resorts, and Harrah’s Entertainment. At T-Mobile, for example, you will be able to place any of their phones on Surface. Surface will sense the presence of each individual phone and then project each phone’s features in front of you for you to consider. If you want to add a feature in the store, just “push” that feature “into” your phone with your finger.

Want to compare three phones? Four? Put them all on the table, and their respective features will line up next to one another, for your consideration.

It’s safe to say computing will not look the same again.

Learn more about Surface at http://www.microsoft.com/surface/


http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/18928656

Hardrock69
05-31-2007, 11:22 AM
Damn check out the videos on the Microsoft page.

Click on "Experience Surface", and you will be able to watch 3 videos demonstrating this stuff!

This is right out of the movie "Minority Report"!
:eek:

MERRYKISSMASS2U
05-31-2007, 11:37 AM
Yeah, I am an Apple fan, and even I agree that this thing is amazing.

Coyote
05-31-2007, 12:46 PM
In two words: Holy Shit...

FORD
05-31-2007, 02:21 PM
So this is what Gates has been up to while Steve Jobs was busy rebuilding the Walkman??

Score one for Billy G.

Hyman Roth
05-31-2007, 02:50 PM
Good reading! This technology is so way over my head and its all changing so fast anyway....but its a fun challenge for me to try and grasp the basic concepts. Computers having "intuition" is a bit of a spooky concept.

Check this out, its not as encompassing as what it seems like Microsoft is working on but its interesting nonetheless:

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MERRYKISSMASS2U
05-31-2007, 07:39 PM
Keep drooling, they are 10,000 dollars.

FORD
05-31-2007, 07:57 PM
Originally posted by MERRYKISSMASS2U
Keep drooling, they are 10,000 dollars.

Yeah, but so was your DVD player 8 years ago. New technology is always expensive at first, so the R&D expenses get paid off by the rich kids who just have to have the new technology before everyone else. And in some cases, it legitmately costs more to make new stuff because the factories to produce it didn't previously exist.

Factories switching from vinyl to CD is one obvious example of that. Or since you're a Mac fan, the historical expense of Mac hardware vs PC, because you could only buy it from Apple. (with the exception of shome short lived Mac Clones in the 90's)

MERRYKISSMASS2U
05-31-2007, 08:34 PM
Yeah, and at first, it will only be sold to retail (restaurants, etc.)

Nitro Express
06-01-2007, 11:52 PM
Microsoft if it wants to stay in the game has to become a proactive company with better products and quality control. They certainly have the money to do some neat stuff.

I think Apple has done a great job at making computers easier to use and more reliable and I'm deffinately a fan of Mac's and OSX but I still use certain software on PC's. I own both. Computers are so cheap, both Apple and Microsoft make money off the same user.

Nitro Express
06-01-2007, 11:56 PM
Bill Gates is a very competative guy and wants to go out with a bang. He doesn't like being called businessman, he wants to be know as a technical engineering type. I can't think of any product that's very exciting that he's ever developed in the past. Microsoft just bought or stole other people's software and repackaged it and sold it. I would say that makes Bill Gates a smart business man more than a technical guru.

Gates has always been jelouse of Steve Jobs being praised as a geniouse innovator.

MERRYKISSMASS2U
06-02-2007, 12:21 AM
Originally posted by Nitro Express

Gates has always been jealous of Steve Jobs being praised as a genius innovator.

Truth hurts?

Ally_Kat
06-02-2007, 01:46 AM
First thing I thought of was Fahrenheit 451 with the walls you can interact with.

That said, I want one. By the time they become affordable, I'm pretty sure they'll have some even more awesome features. (I'm assuming it does regular computer stuff like internet and all that)

MERRYKISSMASS2U
06-02-2007, 02:20 AM
Originally posted by Ally_Kat
(I'm assuming it does regular computer stuff like internet and all that)

That's one thing I was thinking... where is the browser?

Nitro Express
06-02-2007, 02:50 AM
The weak spot in computing is still the user interface. You only can make a keyboard so small before it slows you down and that goes for the mouse controller as well.

It's like a guitar neck. A certain size is what fits. Too small and it doesn't work. It has to fit our hands and who wants to talk to their computer? That would get annoying in a room full of people using computers.

In the end, the technology will thrive on how useful it is in reality. If it's unuseful it goes on the big scrap heap of interesting but unuseful ideas.

DLRdelight!
06-02-2007, 03:18 AM
that is insane!