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Crestron Demos Microsoft Kinect Gesture Control

Watch a demonstration of Crestron integration with Microsoft Kinect, allowing for gesture control of presentations, shade control and more.


Crestron grabbed some eyeballs at Integrated Systems Europe 2012 in Amsterdam by demonstrating how its control systems can read Microsoft Kinect gestures.

Crestron says it has been testing a new technology by Microsoft that allows Kinect technology to be supported on any Windows-based system, and not just Xbox as in the past.

From Crestron:

Crestron engineers created, and are testing, gestures that integrate Kinect with Crestron control. Crestron control systems will read Kinect gestures so, for example, presenters can sweep their hands left or right to advance/reverse a PowerPoint Presentation and raise or lower hands to dim/raise the lights in the room. With Crestron’s open platform, the possibilities of what you can control and how you can trigger the commands are endless.

Better yet, watch Jeff Singer, Crestron director of global marketing campaigns, demonstrate the Crestron integration with Kinect:


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Article Topics

News · Product News · Videos · Home Automation and Control · Control Systems · Crestron · Demo · Microsoft · Gesture Control · Microsoft Kinect · All topics

About the Author

Tom LeBlanc, Senior Writer/Technology Editor, CE Pro
Tom has been covering consumer electronics for six years. Before that, he wrote for the sports department of the Boston Herald. Migrating to magazines, he was a staff editor for a golf publication and an outdoor sports publication. Now, as senior writer/technology editor of CE Pro magazine since 2003, he dabbles in all departments and offers expertise in marketing. Follow him on Twitter @leblanctom.

10 Comments (displayed in order by date/time)

Posted by Nostradumbass  on  02/03  at  11:09 AM

Something else that will never be fully developed.

Posted by Joe  on  02/03  at  11:55 AM

Oh boy.. I could only imagine the involuntary volume levels, channel changes, light levels, whatever in a NORMAL household environment!  There has to be some type of “master user” recognition - otherwise, forget it!

Posted by RyanE  on  02/03  at  01:32 PM

Yeah, like I really would rather look like I’m having an epileptic fit to change channels than pick up my remote, and press buttons without looking down…

NOT!

Posted by Jason  on  02/03  at  01:33 PM

Waste of time, I don’t see this advancing to many woops there goes my volume ramping, however does deliver the cool factor smile

Posted by RyanE  on  02/03  at  01:36 PM

Also, Google was waaay ahead of them on this one:

https://mail.google.com/mail/help/motion.html

Posted by Rob  on  02/04  at  10:31 AM

Ah, the haters.  grin

This is actually cool.  My concern is that this would have to be an implementation nightmare!  Do you put a Kinect in every room of the house?

Posted by Philip  on  02/04  at  11:43 AM

haha…I’ll wait for mind control…as long as I don’t have to think too hard..

Posted by Adam Leichtman  on  02/06  at  11:34 AM

Now, now…  think about the possibilities for people with disabilities.  Gesture and voice control could be very helpful.  Yeah, I still prefer my hard button remote but concepts like this help spark other great ideas.  Waiting to see what Apple comes up with.  Maybe just a small trackpad type remote that excepts pinch, poke, and multi-finger swipe gestures.  That would be much better than waving my arms in the air, or shouting at the TV to change channels.

Posted by not for Italians  on  02/06  at  01:53 PM

This is definitely not for Italian families!  We already flail our arms around too much as it is.. No way would I want my volume to ramp up while I’m just having a “normal” conversation!

Posted by Bay Area John  on  02/07  at  11:54 AM

The overriding issue is to accurately detect UNAMBIGUOUS PURPOSEFUL MOVEMENT. Note that the extremely limited demo in the video actually failed one of his commands for a page flip. Imagine being afraid to scratch your head or stretch for fear of ramping the volume… Just like VOICE CONTROL, which shuts itself down because some character in the movie yells STOP… These technologies will eventually converge with artificial intelligence and fuzzy logic for context-testing (probably sooner than later). Then, just like humans, the system can judge from multiple cues as to what meaning, if any, should be implied. And it will have the benefit of being able to ask for clarification if it isn’t sure enough… and learn as it experiences the user’s habits. Until that’s available and affordable, it will be safe to sell devices that have buttons.

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