Monday, March 4, 2013

Microsoft Envisions a Surface-Filled, Voice-Activated Future

 

It won’t be long before we’re using giant, w only-sized touchscreens to organize our home life and do our jobs. We’ll talk to faraway relatives on these screens as our virtual, personal chefs tell us what to cook with the food in our fridge. All of our gad give ways will suffice to our voice commands. And we’ll seamlessly transfer information between those gadgets with a hardly a(prenominal) swipes and taps.

This is Microsoft’s bold vision of the future, which it outlined in a video released Friday to announce its new pictorial representation Center in Richmond. The Center highlights Microsoft’s vision of the future of computing — non for generations to come, but in the next five to 10 years. That future, of course, involves a lot of Microsoft products, especially its new appear t fittingts.

Microsoft showed off a world  where the physical and digital converge seamlessly. You’ll be able to interact with digital screens on your walls, and urge on information from your Surface tablet or Windows smartphone to those walls. When you’re home, you’ll be able to push photos to all of the devices in your house — say, for example, digital photo frames you deal hanging on the walls or sitting on shelves.

The connection paints a world where your home is incredibly smart, thanks to all of these wall-based computing devices and screens. At one point a man in a kitchen is cooking and, as if by magic, the recipe is intercommunicate onto the counter top. (Or maybe his counter top is a touchscreen computer as well? The future isn’t always extremely specific.) Microsoft is clear, though: Before long, your entire home will be incredibly smart and thoroughly lined with dozens of machine-accessible devices, sold by Microsoft or containing its software.

Redmond’s vision is by all odds idyllic. Grandma reads stories to her grandkids, who live far away. And not only that, the kids toilet watch the story unfold as a animated cartoon on the giant, pervasive screens across the home. If the little girl doesn’t like airplanes, she gage make the characters travel by film just by voice commands. Forget keyboard, in Microsoft’s future, the computers respond quickly and efficiently to your voice.

“I like to ring of it as a concept car that allows us to treat what it might be like to experience future technologies with visitors, get their feedback, tweak, remix and discuss,” Microsoft editor Steve Clayton wrote in a blog post announcing the Envisioning Center. “It’s all part of advancing the trends we think stir the greatest potential.”

The future of computing certainly looks bright and upright of potential through Microsoft’s lens. But just handle in mind that a two-minute video depicting the future is much easier to make than the actual products the company suggests will pull round in the coming years. Even if it knows where it wants to go, getting there can be brutally hard.



Materials taken from WIRED

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