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Posted on March 3rd, 2009 by David Fearon

(Literally) hands-on with Microsoft Surface


Microsoft Surface

On the back of news that Microsoft is to bring Surface to the UK, it’s been showing off the device at this year’s CeBIT. PC Pro got a private hands-on demo with Surface’s director of product management, the superbly named Matt Champagne.

Sitting idle in the darkened demonstration room, the 30in Surface screen showed a screensaver-style pond animation, with rippling water. Just sitting beside it, our fingers were itching to try. Touching the tabletop produced water ripples around each fingertip; swishing a hand across the water gave an effect eerily identical to swishing your hand through real liquid.

Touching the corner of the display brings up a Media Center-style menu of applications. Waving a hand across it scrolls the list, iPod style, with momentum according to how fast you swish. Champagne first showed off the photos app, and it’s unbelievably effective. You can flick photos across the table from a stack, twizzle them round with two fingers to face you, and zoom them with a two-finger stretching motion. The word ‘intuitive’ was never more apt.

Champagne then showed off a few of the more esoteric features. One used Surface to display patient records: select one and you can show that patient’s medical scans in a real-time draggable 3D view.

Second was a slightly less convincing use of object recognition: dropping tokens on the table produced a set of options surrounding that token, the idea being that they’re used as marketing trinkets although we couldn’t immediately see the point.

Finally there was a jukebox. Albums can be dragged from a stack and spread across the table like the photo app. Tapping them shows the list of tracks and then dragging a track over to the playlist windows adds it to the list. Great for parties, but with the 13,000 Euro price tag, not likely to be overtaking iPods this Christmas.

And that price – and the bulk – of the Surface means it’s limited to commercial use for the foreseeable future. Asked if the price will come down, Champagne was cagey but conceded that the development team “still have a lot of work to do to cost-engineer this product”. It’s aimed squarely at “vertical” markets like retail demonstration booths, bars, financial services and education.

It’s not perfect in use either: the liquid-smooth animations when dragging and flicking photos around occasionally stuttered with what’s presumably the enormous processing power required, and our attempts to drag music tracks onto a playlist needed a lot of experimental stabbing before it worked. There was also a tendency for the system to misinterpret drags as zoom actions and vice-versa. Finally, it doesn’t have any ability to sense pressure – it’s all done purely by an array of five infrared cameras watching the scene from below – so the instinct to press harder when something isn’t working is wasted. That need for cameras to get a clear view of the whole surface also means that the roughly 15-inch-deep Surface cabinet can’t yet be miniaturised.

What’s more, it won’t be possible to directly port the same applications from Surface to the multi-touch-enabled Windows 7. Surface’s touch recognition can cope with dozens of simultaneous fingertips, whereas Champagne explained that standard resistive or capacitive touchscreens can currently cope with only two and “maybe three or four down the line”. And although the applications running on Surface are running on a standard PC, there’s a lot of extra dedicated pattern-recognition hardware connected to the cameras.

So it doesn’t quite work perfectly, but when it does it’s almost unbearably brilliant. Don’t be at all surprised if you see it in a bar near you very soon indeed.

 

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Posted in: Hardware, Newsdesk, Windows 7

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11 Responses to “ (Literally) hands-on with Microsoft Surface ”

  1. Alan Says:
    March 3rd, 2009 at 5:14 pm

    “Don’t be at all surprised if you see it in a bar near you very soon indeed.”

    Not in the bars I drink in.

     
  2. james016 Says:
    March 3rd, 2009 at 5:23 pm

    I see no mention of it being used as a PacMan or Space Invaders game

     
  3. Rick Says:
    March 3rd, 2009 at 7:41 pm

    It’s just a gimmick. $13k in price? 5 cameras to process the ‘touch’ recognition? And what exactly would you do with it? To call it a niche product would be an understatement. This is typical Microsoft–its not vaporware but it’s like a concept car–and about as useful!

     
  4. Paul Ockenden Says:
    March 4th, 2009 at 9:57 am

    As a gadget fan – one who’ll happily splash out FAR too much on stuff, much of it that simply ends up in a pile of similar stuff in the junk room – can I just say that the Surface simply doesn’t excite me at all.

    I’ve been trying to work out why. I think it’s that the technology (cameras, projector) seeming a bit old fashioned. Almost a bit ‘mechanical’. I want stuff that appears to have been designed and built in a lap, rather than a tech-version of Scrapheap Challenge.

    Plus, there’s the form factor. It takes me back 30 years to the table Galaxians and Space Invaders machines of my youth. The Surface is supposed to be a demo of the highest tech available, but they’ve given in a form factor that screams “retro”.

    So, sorry Microsoft, I’m afraid there’s simply no gadget lust here. Try again.

     
  5. Tim Says:
    March 4th, 2009 at 12:08 pm

    Does it only work in darkened rooms?

     
  6. Stuart Turton Says:
    March 4th, 2009 at 1:05 pm

    @Tim

    No, that’s just David Fearon.

     
  7. Paul Ockenden Says:
    March 4th, 2009 at 1:07 pm

    > I want stuff that appears to have been designed and built in a lap

    LOL – I meant lab, of course!

     
  8. The Singapore Daily » Blog Archive » Daily Tech: CeBIT Hannover 2009 Roundup Says:
    March 9th, 2009 at 3:31 am

    [...] Thermaltake Impresses with New Chassis Concept – Softpedia: A-DATA Unveils 512GB XPG SSD – PC Pro: (Literally) hands-on with Microsoft Surface – Computerworld: Fujitsu Siemens debuts ‘zero-watt’ green PC – PC Games Hardware: Ati [...]

     
  9. The Singapore Daily » Blog Archive » Daily Tech: CeBIT Hannover 2009 Roundup Says:
    March 9th, 2009 at 3:31 am

    [...] Thermaltake Impresses with New Chassis Concept – Softpedia: A-DATA Unveils 512GB XPG SSD – PC Pro: (Literally) hands-on with Microsoft Surface – Computerworld: Fujitsu Siemens debuts ‘zero-watt’ green PC – PC Games Hardware: Ati [...]

     
  10. DIY Multitouch Surface Computer | TechNewsHub.com Says:
    April 9th, 2009 at 6:31 pm

    [...] has recently demoed a surface PC. And the price tag shows how new the technology is, at just around $10,000. But now, you can build [...]

     
  11. noicrommentee Says:
    May 3rd, 2009 at 2:13 pm

    [...] Alan Says:

    March 3rd, 2009 at 5:14 pm

    “Don’t be at all surp…

     

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