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Microsoft offers a glimpse of Sphere

Ina Fried CNET News

Published: 29 Jul 2008 08:48 BST

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A group of academics will be among the first people outside Microsoft to see Sphere, a spherical surface computer developed by Microsoft Research.

The sphere-shaped, multitouch computer is similar to the tabletop Surface computer that Microsoft announced last year after years in development. This incarnation, however, remains a project within Microsoft Research and the company has no current plans to bring it to market.

The university researchers are at Microsoft as part of its yearly Faculty Summit. Also at the event, Microsoft announced a series of tools for researchers, including a plug-in for Office that lets people embed a Creative Commons licence directly into their Word, Excel and PowerPoint documents.

The software maker also announced a hosted e-Journal service to allow online academic publications and conference proceedings to more easily be published.

Attendees will get the chance to see Sphere from Tuesday as part of an exhibit hall at the event. ZDNet.co.uk's sister site, CNET News.com, met surface-computing pioneer Andy Wilson on Friday. Wilson showed some of the technology powering Sphere, which was developed in large part by Wilson's colleague, Hrvoje Benko.

Sphere shares much in common with the tabletop Surface that is now being used in places such as AT&T stores in the US. At its core is a projector that beams the 'screen' onto a globe-like display. As with Surface, infrared cameras are used to sense input, although the ones in Sphere are less precise than those used in the commercial Surface.

Sphere can run the same kinds of programs as Surface, such as a photo-sharing application in which multiple users can rotate, stretch, and move pictures. Its spherical shape makes it more practical for some uses, such as gaming and mapping, and less useful for others.

Bill Gates has talked about a vision for surface computing that stretches far beyond the high-end commercial applications of Surface and, in several years' time, would have many of today's surfaces becoming computerised, both at home and at work.

Microsoft Sphere

Microsoft's Andy Wilson shows off the technology behind Sphere, a globe-like surface computer developed by Microsoft Research. A group of academics gathered in Redmond this week will be among the first outside Microsoft to see the technology

 

Credit: Academics to get a glimpse of Microsoft's Sphere from CNET News

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