ESPN

So how are the apps? In general there’s nothing to complain about, they just work. ESPN isn’t exactly my cup of tea, but it’s interesting since the video-scrub and select gesture lives in here. If your ISP is a compatible partner, you get access to a variety of live games, event highlights, and other videos. I’m on Cox, note that there’s ISP branding in the top right below the ESPN symbol showing that my ISP qualifies me to use this feature.

It’s actually pretty cool you can pull up a list of live events and stream them whenever you want. They’ll continue streaming for a short time inside the large screen until you scrub to other videos. 

Inside of an actual video, the controls are a bit interesting. Moving your hand up to the top brings up a video scrubber bar, where you can control fast forward and rewind speed by moving your hand left or right. Moving your hand down then selects the current frame and starts playing. There’s not really any buffering, you just start with a low quality connection and gradually scale up. HD isn’t bad, but there still are some compression artifacts and blocking with fast motion, but it’s close to Netflix quality. 

Interestingly enough, when watching live events one of my immediate curiosities was what happens during commercial breaks. Sure enough, a few minutes in and I found out:

Though that’s boring, the fact that ESPN is willing to risk it all and offer streaming live events to Xbox Live subscribers is pretty awesome, and I can’t complain about the Kinect interaction. The only awkward part of this experience is that the hand gestures are best suited to you standing in front of the display - as with all Kinect interactions. It’s a reasonable expectation that you’d want to watch a game or video sitting down, and although you can select things with your hands whilst sitting, it just doesn’t work as well. 

Zune

The Kinect Zune client is probably the most barebones of the notable preinstalled Kinect applications. Fire it up, and you get a screen with the usual suspects in the same Kinect style - a grid of large tiles. 

What I find a bit strange here is that there really aren’t many audio commands cues beyond suggesting a movie. In fact, the problem really rises from the fact that Kinect doesn’t understand words, names, and titles that aren’t in its voice recognition corpus.

ESPN gets around this by cleverly having you vocalize which number video you want played - video one through six are your options. You can’t just speak the name of the game or the title. Similarly, you can’t search. 

Last.fm

The Kinect-tailored Last.fm experience is similarly laid out. Six tiles you can hover over and make selections with the same way the rest of the Kinect interface Microsoft has put together works. 

What’s interesting about both the Last.fm and Zune applications is that hovering over the large back arrow takes you back into the controller-land versions of these applications. You’re transported essentially right back into the vanilla experience that existed before Kinect - this is just another way of getting there. Waving your hands around inside those experiences brings you into the Kinect-ified versions of those programs. 

The big question mark in my mind is where the Kinect version of Netflix is. Netflix on Xbox 360 is admittedly rich enough to get by without needing a Kinect environment, but it’d be nice to see Netflix given the Kinect treatment the same way the rest of the core Xbox services have been. 

Kinect Interaction Paradigms Video Kinect
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  • Akenin - Thursday, December 23, 2010 - link

    This is the most in-depth review of Kinect. This is some ingenious piece of hardware that is being used by MIT students and universities across the country on robotics and related stuff. I don't think you can compare it to the Move or Wii. It's in a league of its own. I know there are many MS haters out there but it seems they've done this one right. It has an skeleton structure of your body and maps it in real time, just like a 3D Motion Capture device would (It has way less points in the skeleton structure, obviously to keep costs down, it is a video game after all).

    I didn't expect to have that much fun playing Dance Central but I did. My wife loves the zen lessons in Your Shape: Fitness Evolved.

    I would love to see a Kinect Mech Warrrior based game and a new customized controller (that would come for free with the game) with buttons at the tip of your fingers and may be a scrolling wheel... I envision something like a glove. That would be nice!

    I have nothing to say against it, for what it is and what it does and how it does it, it is perfect.
  • hooflung - Saturday, December 25, 2010 - link

    The Kinect rgb camera is limited to 320x240 res because of the USB bandwidth. It doesn't do 640x480 when in game mode. Kapable yes, Komplete, no.

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