Monday 3 February 2014

Korean DMZ supervised by kinect tech to easily identify people shapes

Of the many things we’ve observed about Microsoft’s kinect being used for, tracking the Korean demilitarized area is by far the most exciting one we’ll never get to see.

Microsoft has proved helpful hard to show the many ways that its kinect technological innovation can be used. Their technological innovation is marketed mainly as a game playing equipment, but the ideas that have been implemented by online hackers and learners all over the world show that it is capable of so much more. Their Extremely Dish ad this year even presented some unlikely use cases for a kinect in physicians workplaces and similar locations. Lately a Southern Korean paper has exposed that the boundary between Northern and Southern South korean is supervised using systems based on Microsoft’s kinect receptors in order to easily tell the distinction between an creature and a individual.

To be obvious, there is not a sequence of shiny dark kinect receptors set up in a line across the korean DMZ. While actual information were not made available, there must be an optics program that is a lot more expensive than your regular kinect engaged in this set up. What makes this program special is how it notices motions and uses the skeletal view to figure out whether or not what it recognizes in an creature. In the occasion that a individual is recognized, the program signals the appropriate regulators.

This technical was set up several months ago, so it’s not obvious whether or not it was designed using the new kinect data tracking technological innovation or the unique software from the Xbox 360. It’s likely been customized and improved to a point where it is not officially either program any longer, but it’s a interested direction to see this technological innovation take.

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