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
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
A new product from Microsoft Research. The Sphere comes from the same Microsoft Researchers that developed the Surface, aka "PlayTable".
Courtesy: Todd Bishop
The third of fourth videos. This one reflects Microsoft's vision on future of retailing. Unified communications, touch-enabled environment, bunch of indicator panels.
Courtesy: vkevinruss
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
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
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
Second deployment of Microsoft Surface. Now at the Rio All-Suite Hotel & Casino. Here you can see brand-new application - Flirt.
Courtesy: Microsoft Surface Team
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.
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