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Microsoft Research Demonstrates Technology Breakthroughs at PDC2008
Developers get new tools and a glimpse into future of robotics, Surface, other Microsoft innovations designed to address societal issues and change the computing experience.
Front view of Microsoft Surface.
Front view of Microsoft Surface.
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Los Angeles – Oct. 29, 2008 – At Microsoft’s Professional Developers Conference 2008, Rick Rashid, senior vice president of Microsoft Research, today showed developers how Microsoft is applying software’s power to tough technological and societal challenges.

Rashid announced the limited release of the first software development toolkit (SDK) for Microsoft Surface, new features for Worldwide Telescope, and the Microsoft CCR and DSS Toolkit 2008, which will make it easier to develop loosely coupled concurrent and distributed applications.

“Advances in software hold the key to progress in multiple fields,” said Rashid. “The modern world generates massive data sets - online search, astronomical phenomena, the climate, particle physics, and the human genome, to name a few areas. With software, we can capture, analyze, and make sense of this data to help combat global warming, develop life-saving vaccines, and enrich our kids’ education.”

In his keynote address, Rashid highlighted the news announcements plus initiatives spearheaded by more than 800 researchers in Microsoft Research’s six global labs that are aimed at easing societal problems society and changing the computing experience:

Microsoft Surface SDK

Microsoft Surface is a computing platform that opens a new chapter in the way people interact with computers by connectng them to digital content through natural gestures, touch, and devices such as wireless phones or even tagged drink glasses. The platform is being opened up to the developer community for the first time at PDC2008 with the limited release of the Microsoft Surface software development kit (SDK). The SDK enables developers to build groundbreaking applications that take advantage of the attributes of Microsoft Surface, which include:

Direct interaction: the ability to execute commands through gesture or touch, rather than via a mouse or keyboard.

Multi –touch: the ability to manipulate multiple on-screen items at once. Surface can read more than 52 individual touches.

Multi-user: new collaborative computing scenarios made possible by Surface’s horizontal form factor.

Object recognition: digital responses to objects placed on Surface – functionality that will ultimately permit the transfer of digital content.

Additional highlights from Rashid’s keynote included a wide range updates and announcements, including:

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