Yoga Natal game appears on GAME retailer’s Xbox 360 release schedule
Time for some more salacious prognostications about the future, courtesy of the wily folks over at vg247. The team there claims to have obtained internal documents from UK video game retailer GAME that lists the release dates for forthcoming Xbox 360 titles. The listing is headlined by new iterations of Crysis, Call of Duty and Metal Gear Solid, but the highlight for us gadget junkies is at the very end: Yoga Natal, scheduled for an October release. Now, even if this doc comes straight from the horse’s mouth, game release dates are notoriously prone to fluctuation, so let’s not read too much into that October date. What’s intriguing is that Microsoft does indeed seem intent on creating specialist games for its Natal experience, and it may be that they’ll all include Natal in their titles to make compatibility abundantly clear. Or this may be just a big bad April 1-related hoax, we’ll live either way.
[Thanks, Matt R.]
Yoga Natal game appears on GAME retailer’s Xbox 360 release schedule originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 29 Mar 2010 03:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Posted: March 29th, 2010
at 8:01am by Vladislav Savov
Topics: ConsoleGaming, Games, Gaming, Microsoft, MotionControl, MotionGaming, Natal, ProjectNatal, Videogames, Xbox, Xbox360, YogaNatal, console, console gaming, game, motion control, motion gaming, peripheral, project natal, video games, xbox 360, yoga, yoga natal
Steve Ballmer: The Uncut Interview [Ballmer Interview]
Most of you may not have 16 minutes to spare on this, and probably don’t care anyway, but I promised to post the full video, if only so you can understand the context of our five highlighted segments.
Watch it, share it, do what you like. And if you just want the short and sweet, here again are our five featured bits (shot and edited by Mike Short):
Steve Ballmer Exclusive Interview Series:
Part 1: Ballmer Talks Natal, Says Blu-ray Add-On for Xbox Coming
Part 2: Ballmer on the Smartphone Race: “It Doesn’t Matter What the Critics Say”
Part 3: Ballmer on Zune: Sometimes You Get It Right The Third Time?
Part 4: Ballmer on Those Crazy Ballmer YouTube Videos
Part 5: Ballmer Optimistic About Win 7, But Says Vista Is “Very Popular”
Posted: October 26th, 2009
at 3:30am by Wilson Rothman
Topics: Ballmer interview, Bill Gates, Clips, Natal, Steve ballmer fall 2009 interview, Windows, Windows 7 liftoff, Xbox, Zune, bing, blu-ray, exclusive, nokia, steve ballmer, video, vista, windows 7, windows mobile 6.5, zune hd
Ballmer Talks Natal, Says Blu-ray Add-On for Xbox Coming [Ballmer Interview]
In the first segment of our exclusive Steve Ballmer interview series, the Microsoft CEO and I talk about Natal, the blurring of console generations, and the surprising assertion that “you’ll be able to get” Blu-ray add-on drives for Xbox 360.
When I asked Ballmer about adding Blu-ray to the Xbox, he said:
Well I don’t know if we need to put Blu-ray in there—you’ll be able to get Blu-ray drives as accessories.
Though he says it with certitude, the timing of any kind of Blu-ray accessory is unclear. When I asked Xbox spokespeople about Ballmer’s revelation, they responded:
Our immediate solution for Blu-ray-quality video on an Xbox 360 is coming this fall with Zune Video and 1080p instant-on HD streaming. As far as our future plans are concerned, we’re not ready to comment.
Maybe something cooking for CES? Of course, his Blu-ray comment may not mean that Microsoft is coming out with an external drive—he may have just been shooting down the idea that the Xbox 360 will ever have an internal Blu-ray drive, by saying that any Blu-ray the Xbox gets would have to be external. On the other hand he did say, “You’ll be able to get Blu-ray drives as accessories.”
As you can see in our back-and-forth, Ballmer plays his cards close to the chest, but in my sit-down interview with him, he shared a lot. Prior to the Blu-ray business, Ballmer and I talked about Natal, and the excitement that Matt and Mark experienced when they stepped into the chamber back at E3. When I asked him if Natal was Microsoft’s attempt to do away with concept of game console generations (thereby prolonging the life of a given platform indefinitely), Ballmer smiled knowingly and said “We’ll see.”
Stay tuned for more exciting Ballmer moments (and facial expressions) over the next day, and then the full uncut interview video on Friday.
Posted: October 22nd, 2009
at 12:00am by Wilson Rothman
Topics: Ballmer interview, HD video, Natal, Steve ballmer fall 2009 interview, Top, Windows 7 liftoff, Xbox, Zune video, blu-ray, exclusive, feature, steve ballmer, xbox 360
The Future of Mice (If There Is One) [Microsoft]
While touring Microsoft’s Hardware division, I saw some concept mice that renewed my faith in the quintessential desktop accessory, ones that had capacitive touch surfaces and cameras that enabled an array of precision multitouch gesture. Take a look:
The name of the game is multitouch. The Applied Sciences Group at Microsoft—who helped create with Natal—are basically researching hand-cradled versions of the laptop trackpads and camera gesture systems that are evolving in parallel elsewhere. Though large populations of computer mice may be dying out because buyers prefer laptops over desktops, the mouse still roars in gaming and artistic fields.
The irony is that Microsoft’s reveal of these concept mice comes on the heel of Apple rumors that a new, multitouch Mighty Mouse is on the way to market. Regardless, before Apple lets its mouse out of the bag, take a look at these, because there’s a lot going on here:
• Cap Mouse – So named because it’s capacitive touch, it’s possibly the most completed concept design, mapped with a series of sensible gestures, not just momentum scrolling and pinch zooming, but even thumb flicking to shift photos and toss windows around the screen. The designers made a conscious decision to leave the click mechanism in place, because, like on the MacBook Pro trackpad of their arch-competitor, that physical clicking reduces user confusion. In the video below, you can see the finger activity in the window on the left, while you see the results on the right:
• FTIR (Frustrated Total Internal Reflection) Mouse – Loser of the “coolest mouse name” competition here, this one uses an infrared camera that’s gauging the positions of fingers on a curved acrylic surface. The amount of finger positioning you could see on this baby was astounding, though it probably isn’t economical to use full-rez video of hand positions as a control.
• Orb Mouse – It’s similar to the FTIR but with a semi-sphere where the hand rests. The team mapped gaming commands to demonstrate how regions of the sphere could control different pieces of an app. Something about that sphere makes sense, like it would be easier to remember gestures at different clock positions or something.
• Arty (Articulated) Mouse – A smart low-bandwidth multitouch concept, it basically makes sense of assorted pinching gestures. There’s no camera, instead, the two finger pads each have a little mouse tracker in them, and the system measures how all three “mice” move relative to one another in order to fire off commands.
• Side Mouse – This strange half-mouse has a tracker and clicker, just like mice have had for eons. But it also has a camera that looks forward, interpreting what your fingers are doing and why. The beauty is that it’s basically a Natal for your hand—you can even set it a foot away, and gesture at it with both hands, if that’s what an app calls for. The catch is that when you are using it, you have to rest your fingers on the table, and it’s apparently a bitch to program around all of that involuntary hand movement.
I couldn’t help feel a bit sad when talking to these brilliant guys about their mice. After all, even though I used to be a huge mouse fanatic, it’s been years since I’ve used one. Perhaps it’s laziness or forgetfulness, or my couch-friendly work habits, but I do get the feeling the mouse’s days are numbered. Am I wrong?
Update: Video the research team made, complete with soothing ambient music, showing how each mouse works. Take a look:
Posted: October 5th, 2009
at 8:00am by Wilson Rothman
Topics: Applied sciences group, Arty mouse, Cap mouse, Ftir mouse, Microsoft, Microsoft mice, Multi-touch, Multitouch mice, Natal, Orb mouse, Side mouse, Top, feature, multitouch




