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The Azure Kinect DK is a discontinued developer kit and PC peripheral which employs the use of artificial intelligence sensors for computer vision and speech models, and is connected to the Microsoft Azure cloud. [1] [2] It is the successor to the Microsoft Kinect line of sensors.
Microsoft (MSFT) is shipping Azure Kinect DK in the United States and China. The company rolls out partner updates and enhancements to Teams, Azure and Dynamics 365, ahead of Microsoft Inspire 2019.
Kinect is a discontinued line of motion sensing input devices produced by Microsoft and first released in 2010. The devices generally contain RGB cameras, and infrared projectors and detectors that map depth through either structured light or time of flight calculations, which can in turn be used to perform real-time gesture recognition and body skeletal detection, among other capabilities.
Nearly a decade since the Kinect first launched, the Azure Kinect combines a depth sensor, high-def camera and a spatial microphone array. It's got an "intelligent edge", in that it sees and hears ...
Microsoft Learn is a library of technical documentation and training for end users, developers, and IT professionals who work with Microsoft products. Microsoft Learn was introduced in September 2018. [1] In 2022, Microsoft Docs, the technical documentation library that had replaced MSDN and TechNet in 2016, was moved to Microsoft Learn. [2] [3]
Kinect didn't die, it just changed forms. Today at its annual Build developers conference, Microsoft announced Project Kinect for Azure saying that the sensor array will have all the capabilities ...
Microsoft Docs was a library of technical documentation for end users, developers, and IT professionals who work with Microsoft products. The Microsoft Docs website provided technical specifications, conceptual articles, tutorials, guides, API references, code samples and other information related to Microsoft software and web services.
Kipman joined Microsoft in 2001, [8] [9] starting development on Microsoft's integrated development environment Visual Studio.Starting 2005, he helped in the development of Microsoft Windows, until joining the Xbox department in 2008, [10] where he oversaw the acquisition of the technology for the Xbox Kinect from an Israeli company, [11] PrimeSense. [12]