A new product from Microsoft Research. The Sphere comes from the same Microsoft Researchers that developed the Surface, aka "PlayTable".
Courtesy: Todd Bishop
Julie Larson Green's keynote dedicated to multi-touch capabilities of Windows 7 on D: All Things Digital. Also you could see brand new taskbar - so called superbar.
Courtesy: D6 conference
Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates demonstrates Touch Wall, a new hardware technology from Microsoft that creates a touch-based "white board" interface that lets users interact more naturally with data and applications on their computer.
A new video that gives insight into techologies behind Microsoft Sphere. Here you could see hardware and software that were used for Sphere.
Courtesy: nuricankaya
Demo of new multitouch capabilities of Windows 7. Here you could see photo app, maps app and some more applications that were ported from Surface.
Courtesy: WindowsVistaBlog
Yet another great project of Microsoft Research. The experimental SecondLight technology adds a second dimension to Surface, allowing users to slide "magic lenses" over the display to provide a second surface that can be linked to the first.
Courtesy: Todd Bishop
Funny (but someone might call it horrifying) application from Live Labs: it burns in and out images of what the infrared camera inside the surface sees.
Courtesy: on10
The latest video in series "Microsoft's Future Vision". Again we could see touch surfaces, seamless authorizing and data transfer and AthensPC!
I wish I had an account at that bank.
Courtesy: vkevinruss
Microsoft's Jonathan Cluts demonstrates one of the technology prototypes that Craig Mundie, the company's chief research and strategy officer, is showing on college campuses this week.
Courtesy: Todd Bishop