Skip to content
OnMSFT.com
  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Windows
  • Surface
  • Xbox
  • How-To
  • OnPodcast
  • Edge
  • Teams
  • Gaming
Menu
  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Windows
  • Surface
  • Xbox
  • How-To
  • OnPodcast
  • Edge
  • Teams
  • Gaming
  1. Home
  2. News
  3. Microsoft Kinect Hackathon proves endless possibilities for the motion tracker

Microsoft Kinect Hackathon proves endless possibilities for the motion tracker

Kareem Anderson Kareem Anderson
September 21, 2019
2 min read

Credit Image: Kinect for Windows

Recently Microsoft made the decision to consolidate the company’s Kinect hardware. Developers are now able to use an adaptor to help essentially with development cost. In addition to cost saving measures, Microsoft’s upcoming One-operating system play is also another enticement for Kinect developers. The idea of near future Kinect-based development that will expand beyond the Xbox One and niche business cases is becoming more and more a reality every day. The Kinect faithful are trusting that these new developments from Microsoft will finally spur the promised future the Kinect offered back in its initial release.

A collection of developers in London, this year did their best to help build that aspirational future we all saw from the Kinect so many years ago. Kinect Hack for Windows, the 36 hour coding endurance marathon, took place back on March 21 and 22. Coders focused on a day and half hackathon of the Kinect v2 sensor. More than 80 developers were gathered from the UK, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany, and Mexico to spend a weekend creating some of most unique apps, games, tools, and resources for the Kinect. The event was by all accounts a success with large sales of ‘spectators’ tickets and a long list of new hacks and potential projects for the Kinect.

While the event was designed as a hackathon and not a direct competition, event organizer Dan Thomas of Moov2 with the help of US Kinect team, did put together prizes for more than two dozen Kinect developers. Check out the full list of Kinect projects created during the hackaton over at the source link below. Hopefully, we’ll see some of these make their way into our living rooms, Windows PCs, mobile phones and IoT soon, and hopefully they will entice even more developers to create new solutions with the Kinect sensor.

Further reading: Development, Hack, Kinect, Microsoft, Windows, Xbox

Share this article:
Tags:
Development Hack Kinect Microsoft Windows Xbox
Previous Article Xbox 360 sees 960,000 consoles sold during Black Friday week Next Article Want to attend the Oct 2 Microsoft Event in NYC? Enter for your chance right now!

Related Articles

Red Magic 11 runs PC games like GTA 5 and Cyberpunk 2077 on Android at 60 FPS

April 4, 2026

New Ryzen 9 9950X3D2 loses performance on air cooling

April 4, 2026

Legion Go 2 now costs $1,999 at Best Buy, pricing no longer makes sense

April 4, 2026

Leave a Comment Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Posts

  • Red Magic 11 runs PC games like GTA 5 and Cyberpunk 2077 on Android at 60 FPS
  • New Ryzen 9 9950X3D2 loses performance on air cooling
  • Legion Go 2 now costs $1,999 at Best Buy, pricing no longer makes sense
  • ELSA Launches GigaIO Gryf Portable AI System with Modular Design
  • NASA Artemis II astronauts face Outlook issues in space as mission hits unexpected software glitch

Recent Comments

  1. XxRIVTYxX on Intel Says It Tried to Help Before Crimson Desert Dropped Arc Support
  2. Gaurav Kumar on Chrome Prepares Nudge to ‘Move Tabs to the Side’ as Vertical Tabs Near Release
OnMSFT.com

The Tech News Site

Categories

  • Windows
  • Surface
  • Xbox
  • How-To
  • OnPodcast
  • Gaming
  • Edge
  • Teams

Recent Posts

  • Red Magic 11 runs PC games like GTA 5 and Cyberpunk 2077 on Android at 60 FPS
  • New Ryzen 9 9950X3D2 loses performance on air cooling
  • Legion Go 2 now costs $1,999 at Best Buy, pricing no longer makes sense
  • ELSA Launches GigaIO Gryf Portable AI System with Modular Design
  • NASA Artemis II astronauts face Outlook issues in space as mission hits unexpected software glitch

Quick Links

  • About OnMSFT.com
  • Contact OnMSFT
  • Join Our Team
  • Privacy Policy
© 2010–2026 OnMSFT.com LLC. All rights reserved.
About OnMSFT.comContact OnMSFTPrivacy Policy