Microsoft Announces Surface Computer
Duncan Riley
May 29, 2007

surface1.pngAt the D: All Things Digital conference Wednesday, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer will unveil Microsoft Surface, the first in a new category of surface computing products from Microsoft that will “break down traditional barriers between people and technology”.

A Surface computer is able to recognize physical objects from a paintbrush to a cell phone and allows hands-on, direct control of content such as photos, music and maps. Surface turns an ordinary tabletop into a dynamic surface that provides interaction with all forms of digital content through natural gestures, touch and physical objects.

The new product is aimed directly at hotels, retail establishments, restaurants and public entertainment venues and should be commercially available towards the end of the year.

It’s an interesting product in that it’s completely out of left field. Microsoft gives examples of ordering a beverage during a meal with just the tap of a finger and quickly browsing through music and dragging favorite songs onto a personal playlist by moving a finger across the screen. Build this into a bar and you’d get one-touch beer service although I’m not sure if they’ve found a way to work out when your beer glass is empty so replenishment becomes automatic, maybe in a later version.

The practical uses for Surface at the point of sale are broad. This is touch screen point of sale technology at a new level.

Initial launch partners include Harrah’s Entertainment, Starwood Hotels and T-Mobile. Coverage at CrunchGear here.

Update: Channel 10 has a great first look video here.


surface2.jpgsurface3.jpg

Advertisement
  • Related Topics
Advertisement
  • http://www.zaid360.com Zaid

    Sounds super exciting! I’m sure someone has done this in past as art project of some sort but for MS to be making a product out of it is significant.

    Just don’t give me a blue screen when I’m ordering dessert.

    -Zaid

  • http://www.crunchnotes.com Michael Arrington

    yeah, gaming, porn and video games are the killer apps for this.

  • http://www.jotlet.net Adam

    they gave a demo of this at CES in Jan of 2006 too. i dug up the webcast: http://www.microsoft.com/winme/0601/25904/CES_Keynote_MBR.asx

    looks pretty cool if you ask me

  • http://www.crunchnotes.com Michael Arrington

    ok, the photos app is very cool. I want one. We need it for “testing” purposes.

  • http://searchengines.wordpress.com/ Search Engine WEB

    This is the future of computing – and illustrates the difference between Microsoft and Linux in terms of investments in innovation

  • Eric Willis

    Saw the Jeff Han video about a year ago on youtube…really cool technology. Mike you are right..this is a porn addicts dream come true…

  • Eric Willis

    btw..this is the original Jeff Han video from youtube

  • Bombat

    Instead of auto-filling your empty beer glass, perhaps guests should have to solve a logic puzzle first. A Surface Sudoku, or something like that. :-)

  • Andy

    I’ve been wanting to make an interactive touch-sensitive coffee table for about a year now. Problem is time (I’m not paid to do this), and funds (I’m not Microsoft). It would be a learning experience though, not something with the target of being mass marketed.

    Cheap shot at Linux, there Search Engine Web. I’m not sure how this “illustrates the difference between Microsoft and Linux in terms of investments in innovation” since “Linux” isn’t a single company that can “invest” in things, so it’s really an apples to oranges comparison. Where are all the Microsoft Partners doing this kind of “investment in innovation”?

  • http://www.listikal.com listikal

    Looks absolutely amazing. Same technology that will be implemented into a iPhone killer?

  • David

    Awesomeness.

  • http://www.carlosleopoldo.com Carlos Magaña

    Wow, I think Microsoft this time is innovating, absolutely amazing!

  • http://nikolay.com Nikolay Kolev

    This technology has a tremendous business potential. iPhone is *NOTHING* compared to this!

  • http://www.scotttaylorsblog.com Scott Taylor

    Looks very nice, definitely some promising ideas for businesses to be built upon this technology… I for one will be looking into it :)

  • Alaska Miller

    Sony has a prototype.

    Jeff Han has a prototype.

    Apple certainly for hell has prototype.

    Microsoft now shows off theirs.

    This is now a question of who can get it to the average joe’s hands first. I give it 5 years.

  • Aziz Rehmatullah

    WoW .. this should be the tagline for Surface Computers not Vista :-)

    @ Alaska, the video says that corporations should have surface computers by the end of the year.

    So the average Joe should be playing around with this next year. 5 years is too far ahead, I place my bet on 3 ..

  • foobar

    So did Microsoft steal this from Jeff Han or license it? As if I have to ask.

  • james

    ok ok ok. i’m skeptical of those who are posting saying this is kicks an iphone’s ass. um, one is a cell phone. one is a coffee table that NO ONE is going to buy. it’s quicker if you just send me your photos. or link to them. flickr is even better. and sharing music? let’s be realistic. we’ll just download it. ourselves. interesting to see how MS envisions the future: not everyone has a zune so they must use this coffee table. wireless sharing no good?

  • http://yedda.com Lior Haner

    Seems very cool though I bet Microsoft will somehow make this suck. There are so many ways they can make this good, easy to use and purposeful but I’m sure they’ll find ways to avoid them.

  • http://www.pandoblog.com Yaron Samid

    Finally, Microsoft whole-heartedly deserves theirs “Wow”. Very impressive innovation.

    I wonder what happens when you spill a beer on it.

  • http://magnusdopus.vox.com magnusdopus

    I can see something like this at uWink, Nolan Bushnell’s interactive restaurant. I’m very bullish on ubiquitous computing especially in social environments. Hopefully they will open up application development for this baby.

  • http://idiots.blogspot.com alan jones

    Righhhhhhht… surface computing products from Microsoft that will “break down traditional barriers between people and technology”.

    This, from the one company more responsible than any other for erecting barriers between people and technology?

    Remember the recent Apple ad? “You have come to a sad realisation. Cancel or allow?”

  • http://www.jhatak.com Free Web Meeting/Slide Sharing

    Very innovative. For once..a innovative idea from a giant. this shows that the company has still not lost its agility..

  • http://pinoytechie.blogspot.com jan2x

    Apple lawsuit in 3…2…1

  • http://www.featuritis.com Internet Evangelist

    I wish this was announced on April 1st. ;)

    But, I remember reading it one of the books that Bill gates’ house walls were sort of computer screen and this surface computer seems like productizing the same giving it a commercial angle.

  • trevo

    Very very cool… I wonder who has the patent on “multi-touch” is it Apple (for the iPhone) or Microsoft?

  • Anand

    @Jan2x. This technology has been developing since 2001. Around the time when Apple released their first gen crappy ipods. I am sure MSFT has its load of patents. If they have the patent for object recognition, game over for apple :)

  • What about homeland security?

    I guess Microsoft is greater than Google.

    Microsoft = Satan
    Google = God
    Yahoo = Doggie Sex.

    Strange religion.

  • http://geekinparadise.com/2007/05/29/microsoft-surface/ Geek in Paradise

    Microsoft Surface…

    Microsoft Surface
    Wow, just wow!
    It looks like it’s going to be a battle over the future of “touch” based computing between Microsoft and Apple. Apple seems to be going towards the smaller handheld type market, while Microsoft is goin…

  • http://geekinparadise.com/2007/05/29/microsoft-surface/ Geek in Paradise

    Microsoft Surface…

    Microsoft Surface
    Wow, just wow!
    It looks like it’s going to be a battle over the future of “touch” based computing between Microsoft and Apple. Apple seems to be going towards the smaller handheld type market, while Microsoft is goin…

  • reamjob

    this announcement just sucked the wind out of iFanboys everywhere. imagine if apple had announced this and called it iSurface. Fanboys would be posting it on every blog as the second coming of christ.

    redmond has some fight left, cupertino boys.

  • Nick

    This is NOT new or innovative. Here in Switzerland we’ve been able to buy train tickets by tapping selections on a touchscreen for years.
    The earliest use of touchscreens to interact with a computer was not later than the 1970s. At the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, touchscreens were used in a control system in 1979. There were probably earlier uses.
    There are too many comments here from Microsoft astroturfers trying to present Microsoft as “innovative”.

  • Bob

    Glad to see it coming out of the lab. I’ve seen stuff like this since the 80s, but at very high price points. Bill Buxton made it much more affordable in the mid-90s. The folks at Brown University developed a lot of the UI principles in the late 90s. For some reason, Jeff Han’s slick demo popularized it. Now, MS thinks they’ve found a market where they can commercialize it. If OLEDs and a few other key techs drop in price, this sort of thing may become ubiquitous in 10 years.

  • http://www.socialham.com sean percival

    i want one i want one i want one i want one

  • http://digg.com/microsoft/Microsoft_s_New_Surface_But_what_aren_t_they_telling_us_about_it Ross Hill
  • http://www.tollie.org Tollie Williams

    We saw this same stuff on ZDTV 5 years ago, and probably on CNET back when that network was on TV too. And they said it would do the exact same things back then – except, IIRC, the focus was on touch-table food menus. The technology to do this has been around for a long time now. It’s not who does it first – it’s who does it [well] when the market is ready for it.

  • http://www.fatadam.com Adam

    http://www.fatadam.com/2007/05/30/microsoft-surface/

    I so want one of these things. They look awesome!

  • Miserable sod

    The point is not that it’s a touch screen, but that it’s multitouch and you can do multiple interdevice things with it. But the demo movie is damn cool (I’m a lifelong Apple owner and don’t work for Microsoft)

    I wonder how they’ll power it? Anyone here have airport-style power-sockets-in-floor in their living rooms? I for one look forward to coming home to the heat and whirring fans of my Microsoft coffee table.

  • twig

    seen this sort of technology floating around Cebit for a year or two now, but nothing as organised or fancy as this!

    the wow starts now!

  • Rick

    I’m no MS fan, I hated the Zune and the XBox 360 could be lots better, but this is pretty effin cool.

  • http://www.uniquessentials.com Raj

    A: Microsoft is going to sell it to big companies first – great commercial applications for this kind of device, and its going to be relatively cheap (like $5,000-$10,000) each. Thats about as much as a pool table or slot machine. Its probably a better investment than a Segway! Plus, I’m sure microsoft is throwing the software development and maintence in with the deal to fuel early adoption

    B: Eventually this device will become a platform (pardon the pun) for software development. The hardware (Table PC could be a name for it) would be manufactured by third-parties (like Dell, HP, etc.), the software operating system by Microsoft (Vista Table) and then eventually third-parties would create additional software (for example, a method to substitute zune in the ad with IPod all you apple fanboys).

    Looking at the world of Star Trek and other Futurist’s visions, I don’t find it a far reach that in 2-3 years early adopters will have some version of this in their homes, and in 10-15 years something like this could replace the PC. I am not saying that everyone will have a fuss-ball table like PC in their homes, but some other device that features similar technology such as multi-touch and tagged recognition coupled with Wi-Fi Input/output.

  • http://www.blogculturel.com herwann

    impresionnant je dois dire, le futur s’annonce plutôt intéressant à vrai dire… on est pas loin de MInority report…

  • http://geekinparadise.com James

    Apologies for the double trackback. Forgot to remove the trackback URL when making changes :(

    As for the patent thing, I think it’d be fairly safe to assume that if Microsoft wasn’t the sole patent holder, that they would have licensed what was required. Especially considering their recent announcements in the Patent arena.

  • http://www.uniquessentials.com Raj

    BTW – Gates owns Starwood, one of the hotels using the service first. Was it really that hard to find channel partners that he had to sell to his own company?

    http://retail.seekingalpha.com/article/19954

  • http://www.kondiland.com/GabrielNedelea/Blog.aspx Gabriel Nedelea

    this is a great step from ubiq window devices that I’ve been using and the multi touch seems awesome

  • Adam

    We had table-top computing years ago – it was called pong then.

  • Simon

    Am I the only person who’s completely underwhelmed by this? It’s a flat touch screen lying down rather than on a wall. Big whoop. Sure they’ll sell some to some fancy hotels and companies with more money than sense but I fail to see this as any kind of breakthru

  • http://www.trackfeeder.com Tom

    personally i think its pretty cool. I can think of all sorts of advertising uses

  • http://gotchance.com Hari

    Awesome. MS is really innovative. Once again, i’ve got only one word “AWESOME”

  • Jim H

    It’s pretty cool, but Microsoft didn’t develop it, they bought it. Let’s see what they come up with for it.

    Doesn’t the iPhone have the same thing?

  • Mike

    Nick, Simon – You are correct that touchscreen apps have been around for decades. I remember supporting Big Blue’s touchscreen monitors for a major pharma sales training operation in the late ’80′s combined with (Adobe) Macromedia Authorware. The technology works very well already. And, yes, they are very effective interfaces for people who are not comfortable with traditional computing.

    The biggest innovation, however, is the multitouch UI which allows manipulation of objects and quicker navigation. Most existing commercial touchscreens are single touch.

  • http://www.10xforce.blogspot.com kundojjala

    A tip of the ice berg….few months ago i saw similar thing on youtube demonstrated by a Researcher…..
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PLhMVNdplJc check out the link…

  • http://www.neu-thinking.co.uk PaulWill

    I think you are missing the point here, it’s not the technology, or the spec or anything technical that makes this stand out. Its the interface, the tactile sense of actually moving to make an input. Like the Wii is a movement based games console, the MS Surface is a gesture & touch based device. I for 1 am very excited by this, and as an educationalist see this being great in the classroom.

  • Neil

    um…is anyone actually going to come up with an application???

    The only one on the video was transferring a picture from a camera to a phone (very quickly and conveniently).

    ..anything else?

  • http://www.garthshoemaker.com Garth

    This thing is great. They’ve taken all the best ideas out of the field of table-top human computer interaction and combined them into a really slick package. For those of you who are worried about the cost, Bill Buxton (interaction visionary guy) from MS is convinced that within 10 years we will be able to wallpaper our walls with computer displays as cheaply as we would with normal wallpaper.

    Also, if you are interested in reading more about multi-touch systems, Bill has also written a 25 year overview of the field. There is a lot more to it than Apple, MS and Jeff Han:

    http://www.billbuxton.com/multitouchOverview.html

  • http://blog.johnnypez.com John Butler

    That’s the future right there. I’ve previously only seen experimental examples of this type of technology using the likes of Processing.
    This is the first truly exciting development to come from MS in a long time.

  • Simon

    Neil – And all a bit too quickly and easily for my liking. I’m very cynical about real world performance being anything at all like that.

  • Mike

    There is a movie with Tom Cruise in it, he uses one of these. These things will be everywhere in a few years. Imagine being one of the first restaurants to trick your entire bar ouut with these. You would be packed. Imagine the first surface virus!

  • http://www.michaelkpate.com/ Michael Pate

    It reminds me of some of the screen you used to see at Epcot Center about 20 years ago. Except those were more standard vertical as I recall and I am sure this has much better than sensitivity than those did. All in all, a very interesting product for Microsoft’s first time out (even if my first thought when I read the headlines was Bill showed us this 18 months ago).

  • http://www.surfacefans.com SurfaceFans

    Well, I was checking out several domain names for Surface & found out that around 12 to 15 good domain names with ‘surface’ in it were registered today!

  • http://www.noheat.com Wise

    Sorry just don’t see this as useful or super productive. Think about it two handed GUIs take double the interaction that we have now. Consumers want wii like interaction from their comfortable couch. Spinning pictures and objects is only eye candy and no more productive than traditional GUIs.

    I can see them adding some of these features to Windows but in reality it would only be eye candy and another $200 upgrade.

    On the iPhone these features already exist somewhat because your hands are already near the screen in only makes sense on that kind of handheld device.

    http://www.noheat.com

  • http://stuckincustoms.com Trey Ratcliff

    There was an episode of Firefly that used something like this – only the UI was even more cool and Whedony.

  • David

    Cool technology with great potential if done right as Jeff Han and iPhone have demonstrated, but with Surface…

    Who’s gonna sit round a coffee table for any length of time? For me, it’s not the most comfortable way to interact with technology for prolonged periods. I guess if you get lower back pain using the thing you can look up the nearest chiropracter.

    Plus, it runs on Vista! Call me INSANE but I’m not going to trust a publicly-used-Vista-running-table to manipulate and transfer data between devices.

  • Mike

    I find it interesting that Microsoft would display the Surface videos by using Flash, instead of their new product that is similar to Flash. I guess they are using the most common software to reach the largest audience, instead of promoting their own package. I just find it interesting, that’s all.

  • Satish

    The new Microsoft hits again, w00t.

  • Rachel

    This technology has been touted for ages already, especially since Minority Report. It would really be great if it was made available to the masses, which looks like it’s in the near future. Good news for all geeks!

    So exciting.

  • http://www.bulldogfinancial.com/bullblog Marc Nathan

    While the Multi-touch aspect of this is certainly cool, I think that a lot of people have overlooked the wireless sync features among the various devices like the digital camera and the cell phone. If they could incorporate new wireless battery charging technology like this: http://www.splashpower.com/ it would be the ultimate way to interact with our gadgets. Maybe this is the answer to Mark Cuban’s recent concept of a downloadable music kiosk: http://www.blogmaverick.com/2007/05/29/the-future-of-the-music-business-again/

  • http://www.feeddigest.com/ Peter Cooper

    I like to be optimistic about new things, but I can’t help be a pessimist here. While failed concepts do come around to succeed again, table-top computing has failed miserably so many times I’d be surprised if Microsoft will be the ones to take it mainstream.

    There are significant erognomic challenges beyond mere interaction.. such as that it’s uncomfortable to have to crane over a table to use it, and viewing something at an obtuse angle (such as a table top while sitting) is uncomfortable and impractical. This would work a lot better if it was angled up, but then it’s not a table..

    Just my opinion, but this looks like one of those “exciting” concepts that people go nuts over but go nowhere, like pen computing, “push” technology, Internet Explorer 4′s desktop interaction, 3DO, Microsoft Bob, etc.. of course, it may significantly influence later successes, like each of these.

  • http://www.bitwine.com Alon Cohen – BitWine

    Wow, shows the depth of implementation behind Microsoft and the attention to details. I think it clearly shows that not everything is going to be slow and web based. In addition, that not everything nice in going to be Apple.

    I am missing some Video Cam applications (multi-location collaboration) like being able to sit at my home provide my services, charge for my time by dragging the other person’s credit card – left on his/her table – to my cash register (kind of a BitWine Taskbar on steroids), not to mention the whole tele-working collaborative environment.

    It seems that the HW setup maybe a bit expensive i.e. computer, cameras projector and the heat dissipation and noise associated with that. I am sure they will get over that hurdle eventually.

    I think Microsoft is finally getting what Apple got long ago, it is not only what you can do with the computer (clearly the most important element) but, you need the “cool” factor attached to that to make many people really appreciate, and better connect with the application and the vendor.

  • http://nuigroup.com nui

    Learn how to make your own multi-touch table: nuigroup.com/forums

  • Todd

    A gigantic piece of dedicated, immobile hardware that uses closed, proprietary software? No thank you.

    If I wanted a huge piece of nostalgia hardware in my living room, I’d buy a Cray computer, replete with cooling fluid fountain, on ebay.

  • http://www.youtubesearcher.com youtubesearcher

    To Nic (#30), are you REALLY comparing a touchscreen from the 70′s to this thing ?

    If we all thought like you did, innovation would have stopped in the 70′s.

  • giafly

    I remember discussing something that looked very like this at HP Pinewood in 1979. The market was graphic designers.

  • http://www.bishamon-pallet-jack.com pallet jack

    multi touch around since the 70′s = patent is expired.

    – anyone and everyone .. I want a open source … and cheap input devices

    – Also / Why can’t the next gen TV remote / be functianal like the wii remote.

  • http://allanjosephbatac.com/blog/ aj

    Perceptive Pixel technology being used by MS?

    http://allanjosephbatac.com/blog/2007/05/microsoft-surface-perceptive-pixel.html

    OR are they competitors in this space?

  • http://flash-ripper.com/en/ Rostislav Siryk

    It’s a true public computer, not “personal” one!

  • http://www.corank.com/tech/story/microsoft-Announces-Surface-Computer.html coRank

    Microsoft Announces Surface Computer…

    The future of computer. As easy as driving a car….

  • http://blog.getnoticedfirst.com demetrius pinder

    While this looks awesome, I cant help but to think of all the potential problems it might have because of Microsoft.

    Despite that, at least MS is innovating.

  • http://cheaptravelling.blogspot.com/ Timoty

    No, i think it`s could be personal… in your room ;)

  • Robert Dewey

    Sweet… but is it just a pipe dream?

    I like the sync feature, but that could actually be implemented much better using “in the cloud” storage when WiMax (or some other ubiquitous cover-all internet) becomes a reality. When it boils down to it, that’s what this surface computer is really all about – syncing.

  • Robert Dewey

    Hmm… the multi-touch kind of makes me wonder. With the rash of people sticking their bare ass on copy machines in the 80′s and early 90′s, I wonder if Microsoft’s device will be the next one to get “assed” – that multi-point touch screen is mighty tempting…

  • http://technocloud.com/index.php/2007/05/30/not-even-scratching-the-surface/ TechnoCloud

    Not even scratching the Surface…

    It’s not often these days that you see a piece of technology that makes your draw drop, yet Microsoft have done that to me with Microsoft Surface. If there’s a better piece of gadget eye candy I’d like to see it (although Scoble saw i…

  • Robert Dewey

    I wonder if surface-to-ass syncing is possible? Gives new meaning to “you can shove those photos up your ass”

    Okay, okay… I’m done ;)

  • http://jeffstalnaker.com/2007/05/30/microsoft-introduces-surface/ Jeff Stalnaker

    Microsoft introduces “Surface”…

    TechCrunch is running a story about Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer announcing a new type of computing device called “Surface.” Effectively it is a multi point touch screen interface mounted in a table top that also is able to recognize objects…

  • Saurabh

    Cant we shrink this thing to fit into a pocket and call it “Pune” ? :)

  • trevo

    I think another thing that is NOT mentioned here is how this device works – it works by using infra red sensors to detect objects on the screen.

    This is a LOT more powerful than using traditional touch-screen overlays because they can be scratched. IE. Traditional touch screen puts a layer of touch sensing material that if you scratched its surface, it would get messed up. I think in this device, the surface is just glass and the sensor is underneath it, making it more impervious to scratches.

    Anyways, everyone talks about Minority Report, but the “real” application that came to mind was in “The Island”.

  • http://www.techreview.ca/2007/05/30/microsoft-table-computing-launched/ Microsoft Table Computing Launched : Tech Review Canada

    [...] a look at this video over on TechCrunch that shows how easy it can be to transfer a picture straight off of a digital [...]

  • http://blog.neu-thinking.co.uk/?p=54 Microsoft Surface – the future of interfaces?

    [...] got put onto this by edtechroundup.com and techcrunch.com two very useful sources for technology information.They posted info on a new technology from [...]

  • http://www.digilicious.cl/2007/05/30/microsoft-surface/ Digilicious » Blog Archive » Microsoft Surface

    [...] TechCrunch Posteado por MAD | (Sin votos)  Loading [...]

  • http://blog.novedge.com/2007/05/back_to_the_fut.html NOVEDGE blog

    Back to the Future: CAD Returns to the Drawing Board?…

    Yesterday Microsoft announced a new product called Microsoft Surface. It’s a computerized table — the top surface is a computer display that recognizes and interacts with physical objects from a paintbrush to a cell phone and allows for hands-on, dir…

  • http://whatihearyousayingis.com Blake

    yikes… my lower-back just aches looking at this thing. What are the ergonomic repercussions of using something like this, even as a 20 minute coffee table session of photo viewing and the like.

  • http://www.digg.com Jessica

    “This technology has a tremendous business potential. iPhone is *NOTHING* compared to this!”

    I take it you’ve used both devices?

  • http://www.johnchow.com/microsoft-announces-surface-computer/ John Chow dot Com

    Microsoft Announces Surface Computer…

    Check out this video showing off the new Microsoft Surface Computer. It’s pretty wild. A Surface computer is able to recognize physical objects from a paintbrush to a cell phone and allows hands-on, direct control of content such as photos, music…

  • http://anitokid.blogspot.com/ AnitoKid
  • http://www.hmtk.com HMTKSteve

    There is only one killer app that this thing needs to sell:

    Audio/Video Mixing Board

    Once they get that on there these things will sell!

  • ChrisD

    Man, this thing looks like a demo from the MIT MediaLab. I’m sure MSFT took some inspiration from the Tangible Media Group (and others) there.

  • Nemrut

    This is a great step forward to more flexible computing. If MS succeeds with this it could do a lot to prevent to prevent repititve stress injuries while making computing a more physically beneficial activity.

    As much as i dislike MS appropriating others ideas, I’m crossing my fingers on this one and hope it gains immediate traction like the Wii and flat panel tvs.

  • http://www.hardchiu.com/blog/?p=3 hardchiu revolution

    Microsoft Surface – 是軟是硬?…

    在TechCrunch 上見到Microsoft Surface, 一個新一代的input device
    從前也在YouTube 上看過類似的片, 但就是無無聊聊的, 只有一個型字
    今次Microsoft 真的開始promote 了, 見到很多use cases
    一個product 只係型好…..

  • Jeff

    For a really great demonstration of where this is all going by Jeff Han that was done in 2006, check out his TedTalk at http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/view/id/65.

  • http://avril.sproj.com Yahya Cheema

    This is super cool… MS has finally started doing some real innovation again!

    I was especially impressed by the fact that they’ve finally learned from apple and have started focusing on user experience… also check PopFly-their mashup tool.

    The only thing MS needs to change now are bad business practices (like ignoring google tools in PopFly)… they should seriously start playing fair and people might just start loving them again.

  • http://district12.anifstudios.com Anif™

    #85 brought up a very good point about 1 killer app that makes sense. If they could develop a virtual Audio/Video mixing board on that thing….it will definitely sell like hot cakes. Just imagine it, dragging faders, turning knobs and pushing buttons on it, being able to add channels on the fly as you need. Even the ability to pull out a virtual MIDI keyboard and play on it….now that is killer!

  • http://digg.com Robert

    For all those Microsoft Haters (or iFanBoys out there)

    Microsoft is loved by every human in the world other than your 100 friends who are also iFanBoys and those 100 iFanboys have 99 friends similar to your list…that makes a grand total of 101 geniuses who hate Microsoft and think that they are not innovative….

    Surface Rules…

  • http://jehzlau.blogspot.com jehzlau

    amazing! hehehehe :) *speechless*

  • icemann

    This can be more interesting if they develop a ‘portable’ one. It is amazing though.

  • http://www.enterthejabberwock.com J Crowley

    It’s not exactly “innovative” or “new”. I’ve seen this exact concept in scifi movies over the last couple decades. It’s pretty much a direct rip off of Minority Report. Or… it might’ve been The Island. Or both.

    Still, pretty awesome someone’s making it real, and it’s interesting to examine how scifi effects real technologies. Unfortunately it had to be the company with a history of anti-competitive business practices, and etc. It’s a shame innovation is so often profit-driven; it’d be great if ideas and inventions were more open source.

  • http://digg.com Robert

    @J Crowley

    Ass, Transformer is coming out on 4th July. You will definitely see something more innovative than in Minority Report.

  • http://www.enterthejabberwock.com J Crowley

    Haha, well, I was just using it as an example. My point was more that this idea has been floating around in scifi in general for quite a while. I wonder if/when there will ever come a point where the line between science fiction and science fact no longer exists. Of course, a touchscreen table from Microsoft isn’t exactly a giant leap in that direction, but it brings the idea to mind.

    Anyway, definitely looking forward to Transformers.

  • AGronowski

    Not all that innovative. Surf YouTube for “reac table.”

  • http://www.isulongseophil.com/ gio

    i wonder when will they have a PC version. :)

  • JamesP

    The demo site is impressive, but they make it look too flawless. They show a group of friends coming over and slapping down their Zunes and trading songs like they were flicking soap bubbles. Considering that Leprosy is more popular than Zune (I’ve never even seen two Zunes in the same zip code), I suppose you can flick songs to yourself. But, it’s definitely a cool demo. It just kind of smells like a Segway scooter though — very cool, but nobody’s going to actually pay to own one. You’ll probably just see them in hotels and restaurants.

    My major question would be what OS does this thing run? If it’s got Vista blood in it, I’d be very wary. But, if it is something completely new, it begs the question as to how Vista can ever realistically move to multi-touch.

    I think what’s interesting to note, particularly from reading Bill Buxton’s history of multi-touch, is that Apple purchased FingerWorks a few years back — which was a pioneer in multi-touch technology.

    Clearly Apple has already put the basic multi-touch funtionality into the iPhone, but I think what’s more striking is that Apple is clearly priming OS X’s interface for multi-touch effects (Spring-loaded folders, the drag-drop effects on and off the Dock, fast-user switching effects, graceful widget-flips, OpenGL, WebKit, etc.). It looks as if Apple has been building the multi-touch effects into OS X for years.

    I’m fairly certain that Vista does not have what it takes to do multi-touch interfacing cleanly — it’s too clunky and really solely engineered for mouse interfacing. Plus, Vista can barely even talk to Zune’s properly half the time. My guess is that Microsoft will go after the “clunky restaurant table market” and Apple will actually create portable OS X multi-touch computers that ditch keyboards and mice altogether.

  • Gmys

    Microsoft will bring it out, linux will perfect it.

    I’m sure we’ll see the same thing happen here that happened to the Operating systems. IE: vista’s AERO interface, vs. Linux’s BERYL.

  • http://yehmanas.com/archives/69 Manas

    Microsoft Surface – D Bomb!…

    Microsoft’s launch yesterday of the multi-touch interface toting $10,000 Surface Computer is awesome. It features multiple cameras which identify the things you put on the table top, which is a beautiful screen, recognizing wi-fi devices and s…

  • http://stickiwidgets.com/2007/05/31/multi-touch-surface-computing/ StickiWidgets

    Multi-Touch Surface Computing…

    Saw this over at TechCrunch from a couple of days ago. Not widgets related but very interesting none-the-less. Microsoft announced Microsoft Surface, a multi-touch surface computing platform. Users interact with the surface computer through touch, g…

  • http://blog.technolawyer.com Neil J. Squillante

    Does anyone remember Apple’s Knowledge Navigator?
    See: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3WdS4TscWH8

  • http://blog.lazyindustries.com/?p= lazy industries

    [...] From TechCrunch [...]

  • http://blog.lazyindustries.com/?p=178 First Look: Microsoft Surface at lazy industries

    [...] From TechCrunch [...]

  • http://hackd.wordpress.com/2007/06/01/ui-tip-be-physical-real/ Hack’d – Great Stuff for Web Hackers

    UI Tip: Be Physical & Real…

    I was playing around with a new web app the other day, called BuzzWord. I play around with as many new services as I can so I can get as many ideas as I can for new styles of user interface. (Screenshot included). Despite the fact that it was flash …

  • mtawaz

    The ergonomics of it has to be top on. Imagine staring “down” a screen for 2hrs or more. Think it’s brilliant tech but ergomically poor.

  • A F MALIK

    good but not much impressive

  • http://jbmsolutions.com baijnath

    well, I was just using it as an example. My point was more that this idea has been floating around in scifi in general for quite a while. I wonder if/when there will ever come a point where the line between science fiction and science fact no longer exists. Of course, a touchscreen table from Microsoft isn’t exactly a giant leap in that direction, but it brings the idea to mind.

  • http://www.cnsinfotech.com JAI

    Hi,
    I am jai from CNS Infotech Delhi INDIA.
    well, I was just using it as an example. My point was more that this idea has been floating around in scifi in general for quite a while. I wonder if/when there will ever come a point where the line between science fiction and science fact no longer exists. Of course, a touchscreen table from Microsoft isn’t exactly a giant leap in that direction, but it brings the idea to mind.

  • Vishu

    This is super cool… MS has finally started doing some real innovation again!

  • http://adrianoafricano.wordpress.com/2007/06/07/wow-i-cant-wait-to-get-my-hands-on-this/ Wow! I can’t wait to get my hands on this!!! « adriaño africaño

    [...] 1 and as far as Foley is concerned this is actually being developed. Given Microsoft’s move into Surface Computing it’s not improbable that the kitchen may follow the coffee table as Microsoft’s next [...]

  • Scott

    This really isn’t that innovative.

    These guys built their own system in just over two years. The entire project is open source and your can build your own own multi-touch, object positioning and orientation surface using off the shelf parts.

    http://mtg.upf.edu/reactable/?media

  • http://surfacefans.net/ Saran

    Microsoft Surface Fansite available at http://surfacefans.net/

  • http://www.simon.grothkopp.com/wordpress/2007/07/09/zukunftscomputer/ Simon.Grothkopp.com » Blog Archiv » Zukunftscomputer

    [...] Microsoft lässt aber natürlich nicht lange auf sich warten und so sah ich gerade eben ein Video, was mich sogar etwas beeindruckt hat: Ein Klotz-PC im Wohnzimmertisch-Desgin, wodrauf man mit den [...]

  • http://geekbriefwp.podshow.com/gbtv-0175-geekbrieftv GeekBrief.TV | Video Podcast » Archive » GBTV #0175 | GeekBrief.TV

    [...] of the Surface Computer from On10 TechCrunch Engadget [...]

  • http://www.ipatrix.com/microsoft-surface-an-interactive-coffee-table/ Microsoft Surface – An Interactive Coffee Table

    [...] Surface – that promises to redefine user-interaction through physical and natural hand gestures [TechCrunch announcement]. The simplest example in our daily lives where this is implemented today are your ATMs or the [...]

  • http://blog.roasm.com/?p=78 Ramblings of a Short Man » I want a Microsoft Surface!

    [...] coverage is everywhere and the demos are fantastic.  The technology is not the most important thing here; [...]

  • http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/04/01/microsoft-surface-coming-to-att-stores/ Microsoft Surface Coming To AT&T Stores

    [...] first unveiled the Surface back in May 2007; the coffee-table like computer allows touch screen interaction with various surfaces, can [...]

  • http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/05/14/microsoft-touchwall-can-inexpensively-turn-any-flat-surface-into-a-multi-touch-display/ Touchwall: Microsoft’s Inexpesnive Wall-Based Multi-Touch Interface

    [...] and Plex are superficially similar to Microsoft Surface, a multi-touch table computer that was introduced in 2007 and which recently became commercially [...]

  • http://www.crunchgear.com/2008/05/14/microsoft-touchwall-can-inexpensively-turn-any-flat-surface-into-a-multi-touch-display/ CrunchGear » Archive » Microsoft TouchWall can inexpensively turn any flat surface into a multi-touch display

    [...] and Plex are superficially similar to Microsoft Surface, a multi-touch table computer that was introduced in 2007 and which recently became commercially [...]

  • http://moddpodd.com/2008/05/touchwall-multi-touch-interface/ information architecture and experience design – atlanta, GA » Blog Archive » Touchwall: Multi-Touch Interface

    [...] according to tech crunch; bill gates will demo a new multi-touch computer and interface today called touchwall at the microsoft CEO summit in redmond. (see video here). [...]

  • http://fr.techcrunch.com/2008/05/15/microsoft-presente-touchwall-le-mur-tactile-interactif-bon-marche/ TechCrunch en français » Microsoft présente TouchWall, le mur tactile interactif bon marché

    [...] Au cours d’une présentation hier, GM Chris Pratley de Microsoft Office Labs et Ian Sands affirmaient que ces deux produits sont en fait différents. Surface est appareil tactile muni d’un système vision qui utilisent des cameras pourr sentir ce qui est sur la table. Il peut par exemple détecter un portable et interagir avec de diverses façons, comme en extraire des photos (voir la video ici) [...]

  • http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/05/27/live-from-all-things-digital-gates-and-ballmer-preview-windows-7/ Live From All Things Digital: Gates and Ballmer Preview Windows 7, Multi-Touch

    [...] VP Julie Larson-Green demoed new multi-touch functionality based on the same principles as Surface. Microsoft is working with OEMs to get the multi-touch feature on at least some new machines once [...]

  • http://hareendrakondragunta.wordpress.com/2008/07/02/amazing-microsoft-surface-computing/ Amazing Microsoft Surface computing « HareendraKondragunta’s Weblog

    [...] July 2, 2008 by Kondragunta Hareendra Use your restaurant table to give order. Put your credit card in the table for payment. Once you are in business meeting and both of you are carrying blue-tooth enabled mobile phones can share your business data. All in your good old normal table with abnormal activities.  I wonder how people are getting all these ideas. Watch this for more information on surface computing. http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/05/29/microsoft-announces-surface-computer/ [...]

  • http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/08/21/a-peak-at-new-microsoft-surface-apps-drum-set-surfacedj-and-bmw-kiosk/ A Peak At New Microsoft Surface Apps (Drum Set, SurfaceDJ, and BMW Kiosk)

    [...] can you do with a Microsoft Surface touch-screen computing table, other than use it as an expensive interactive kiosk in AT&T [...]

  • http://dailymarauder.com/2008/08/21/technology-235/ TECHNOLOGY « Daily Marauder

    [...] can you do with a Microsoft Surface touch-screen computing table, other than use it as an expensive interactive kiosk in AT&T [...]

  • http://simplygadgets.com/?p=222 Simply Gadgets » Blog Archive » A Peek At New Microsoft Surface Apps (Drum Set, SurfaceDJ, and BMW Kiosk)

    [...] can you do with a Microsoft Surface touch-screen computing table, other than use it as an expensive interactive kiosk in AT&T [...]

  • http://ps.pitauto.com/2008/08/23/comment-on-microsoft-announces-surface-computer-by-simply-gadgets/ Ps Blog » Comment on Microsoft Announces Surface Computer by Simply Gadgets …

    [...] Read the rest of this great post here [...]

  • http://www.aleyram.com/forum/a-peek-at-new-microsoft-surface-apps-drum-set-surfacedj-and-bmw-kiosk.html A Peek At New Microsoft Surface Apps (Drum Set, SurfaceDJ, and BMW Kiosk) | SesliChat Sesli Sohbet

    [...] can you do with a Microsoft Surface touch-screen computing table, other than use it as an expensive interactive kiosk in AT&T [...]

  • http://ps.pitauto.com/2008/08/23/comment-on-microsoft-announces-surface-computer-by-a-peek-at-new/ Ps Blog » Comment on Microsoft Announces Surface Computer by A Peek At New …

    [...] Read the rest of this great post here [...]

  • http://ogerente.com/congestionado/2007/06/01/microsoft-surface-%e2%80%93-como-a-inovacao-pode-afetar-sua-empresa/ Microsoft Surface – Como a Inovação pode Afetar sua Empresa | ConGestionado

    [...] A Microsoft acaba de anunciar seu novo “computador de mesa”. Na realidade é um conceito completamente diferente na computação, que permite a interação de pessoas em um mesmo ambiente gráfico, assim como integração com outros acessórios de forma prática e rápida. Mais fácil do que entender a explicação é ver o vídeo no TechCrunch. [...]

  • http://ordaso.com/a-peek-at-new-microsoft-surface-apps-drum-set-surfacedj-and-bmw-kiosk/ A Peek At New Microsoft Surface Apps (Drum Set, SurfaceDJ, and BMW Kiosk) | Semantic Web Reviews

    [...] can you do with a Microsoft Surface touch-screen computing table, other than use it as an expensive interactive kiosk in AT&T [...]

  • http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/08/31/first-modular-multi-touch-lcd-screen-takes-aim-at-microsoft/ First Modular Multi-Touch LCD Screen Takes Aim At Microsoft

    [...] since Microsoft announced its Surface computer, which currently retails for about $10,000 and can be found in some AT&T stores, more companies [...]

  • http://blog.xi-ji.com/?p=267 微軟 Touch Wall 的競爭對手 – Multitouch Cell | 翔基國際有限公司

    [...] since Microsoft announced its Surface computer, which currently retails for about $10,000 and can be found in some AT&T stores, more companies [...]

  • http://linden.qublogs.com/2008/09/07/our-four-interactive-fathers/ » Our Four [Interactive] Fathers organized chaos.

    [...] 5. Microsoft Surface. Retrieved September 2, 2008, from http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/05/29/microsoft-announces-surface-computer/ [...]

  • http://www.filipegatti.com/?p=72 Filipe Gatti » Uma espiada nos novos aplicativos touch-screens da Microsoft

    [...] que você consegue fazer com uma mesa digital touch-screen, a Microsoft Surface? A VectorForm teve algumas idéias boas. Ela tem trabalhado no desenvolvimento de aplicações para [...]

  • http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/10/08/microsoft-office-labs-releases-touchless-multi-touch-as-an-open-source-sdk/ Microsoft Office Labs Releases “Touchless” Multi-Touch Software As An Open-Source SDK

    [...] Microsoft Surface and Touchwall, the Touchless software makes it possible to create applications that turn hand [...]

  • http://jamieandrei.wordpress.com/2008/11/01/microsoft-surface/ Microsoft Surface « Digital_Synergies_?

    [...] Microsoft Surface Post [...]

  • http://l6p.net/?p=246 l6p.net :: Blog Archive :: Do Technology Trends Have Their Own Hype Cycle?

    [...] Computers started hitting the news last year where Microsoft announced a division dedicated to bringing these to the masses.  Surface computers can recognize things you [...]

  • http://www.npsperde.com perde

    good

  • http://www.tipsdr.com/2007/05/surface-computing-from-microsoft/ Computing Goes to the Next Level, Surface Computing is Almost Here | Tips Dr.com

    [...] Techcrunch wonders when it will recognize that our beer is empty and replenishment is automatic. Robert McLaws has a GREAT wrap-up of the history of Microsoft Surface, and says that it started as TouchLight. Lots of great videos and images available at the official site for Microsoft surface here. [...]

  • http://www.ecosilly.com/2009/02/05/live-blog-from-ted-pattie-maes-invents-a-sixth-sense/ Live Blog from TED: Pattie Maes Invents a Sixth Sense | EcoSilly

    [...] system looks a bit like Jeff Han’s multitouch interface and the Microsoft Surface computing, but points out that this is a solution that works on any surface. You might use it to reframe your [...]

  • http://www.trvidcom.com.au Computer Rental Company

    Cool stuff! I wish I could own one though.

    Computers have definitely simplified our complex daily tasks. And everyday these gadgets keep on developing, making us users dependent on these stuffs. I’m predicting that someday we won’t be able to do even the simplest things without the aid of these “techy” gadgets.

  • http://www.trvidcom.com.au Computer Rental Company

    Cool product review!

    Touch screen technology has been the trend these days. From smart phones and now on desks. Truly, computing has vastly evolved in a lot of ways.

  • http://101amannen4092.wordpress.com/2009/04/10/microsoft-surface/ Microsoft Surface « Alex Mannen

    [...] Microsoft Surface Microsoft Announces Surface Computer [...]

  • http://www.gamekoo.com/product/Mabinogi_Gold.html buy mabinogi gold

    Do you know that the mabinogi gold, and do you want to know? In the game many palyers need the mabinogi money to up their levels. so they often search where can buy the cheap mabinogi, I think our website is your choice. Many friends told me that in here can buy mabinogi gold, and you will also practice your online games skills. So i hope more and more players come here to buy the mabinogi online gold.

  • http://technologizer.com/2009/05/22/after-two-years-microsofts-surface-tabletop-computer-hasnt-revolutionized-anything-yet/ After Two Years, Microsoft’s Surface Tabletop Computer Hasn’t Revolutionized Anything. Yet. | Technologizer

    [...] all:&nbspNews When Microsoft unveiled its Surface tabletop computer two years ago, the company vowed to “break down traditional barriers between people and [...]

  • http://wearerobots.org/?p=207 MS Surface Computer « WE ARE ROBOTS

    [...] More video here | Via [...]

  • http://wearerobots.org/?p=208 MS Surface Computer « WE ARE ROBOTS

    [...] More video here | Via [...]

  • http://blastula.multiplace.org/2009/02/11/live-blog-from-ted-pattie-maes-invents-a-sixth-sense/ Live Blog from TED: Pattie Maes Invents a Sixth Sense

    [...] system looks a bit like Jeff Han’s multitouch interface and the Microsoft Surface computing, but points out that this is a solution that works on any surface. You might use it to reframe your [...]

  • suchit

    Wow………. Tremendance performer the Surface Computer.
    I like this computer, and i hope so i will just within a day i m working this computer.

    So Enjoyyyyyyyyy the use in computer.

    Thank u & Byeee.

  • sriram

    this proves that ms is little better than other enterprises,and they spend bugs for innovations.thts the diffference and ths the future………………

  • http://www.whatjamiefound.com/2007/05/30/microsoft-surface-computer/ Microsoft Surface Computer | What Jamie Found

    [...] Official website: Microsoft SurfaceVia TechCrinch: Microsoft Announces Surface Computer [...]

  • http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/10/12/why-touch-screens-on-the-desktop-dont-really-work/ Why Touch Screens On The Desktop Don’t Really Work

    [...] don’t get this problem with Microsoft’s Surface computer, which is a low table in front of you. And the TouchSmart layout tends to work well in the kitchen, [...]

  • anoop sharma

    i like this type of computer but how it useful day 2 day life or commerce

  • k.manikumar

    its very innoviative and it is a tremondous movemoment in toutch technology

  • http://blogs.silentdefender.co.uk/technews/if-it-were-up-to-me-the-ipad-would-have-a-touch-sensitive-case/ If It Were Up To Me, The iPad Would Have A Touch Sensitive Case – News from the technology world – Technology News

    [...] really opened my eyes to what it could do. I was one of the first individuals to actually buy a Microsoft Surface computer, happily paying $17k, including delivery and warranty. And I joyfully tested the Microsoft [...]

  • http://www.louisvilledatasolutions.com/2010/04/it-support-for-louisville-business/ IT Support For Louisville Business | Louisville Computer, Network, And Data Solutions

    [...] Microsoft Announces Surface Computer – A Surface computer is able to recognize physical objects from a paintbrush to a cell phone and allows hands-on, direct control of content such as photos, music and maps. Surface turns an ordinary tabletop into a dynamic surface that provides interaction with all forms of digital content through natural gestures, touch and physical objects. The new product is aimed directly at hotels, retail establishments, restaurants and public entertainment venues and should be commercially available towards the end of the year. [...]

  • http://jeanfriesewinkel.com/strategyist/2010/05/shifting-profit-pools-very-personal-computing/ Very Personal Computing and the new PC industry landscape « Strategyist

    [...] But I still wonder why they keep killing the good stuff, or not pushing it: what happened to Surface and to these multi-touch mice? [↩]IMHO, Microsoft should buy them and give them a proper OS [...]

  • http://satechheads.blogetery.com/2010/05/15/upgrading-system-memory-4/ Upgrading System Memory

    [...] Microsoft Announces Surface Computer – A Surface computer is able to recognize physical objects from a paintbrush to a cell phone and allows hands-on, direct control of content such as photos, music and maps. Surface turns an ordinary tabletop into a dynamic surface that provides interaction with all forms of digital content through natural gestures, touch and physical objects. The new product is aimed directly at hotels, retail establishments, restaurants and public entertainment venues and should be commercially available towards the end of the year. [...]

  • http://computersshopsstore.com computers

    absolutely amazing.
    a huge business potential.

blog comments powered by Disqus
Advertisement
Got a tip? Building a startup? Tell us