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ActiveWin: Q&A with Microsoft Senior VP of Research, Rick Rashid

Rick Rashid, Senior Vice President at Microsoft and head of Microsoft Research, recently celebrated his twentieth anniversary at Microsoft this year. Rick was in Pittsburgh this past weekend (May 14, 2011) to deliver the commencement speech for Carnegie Mellon’s School of Science and doctoral hooding ceremonies, as well as to receive an honorary Doctor of Science & Technology degree. While here, Rick took some time to sit down with ActiveWin.com at Microsoft’s Pittsburgh offices to discuss some of his endeavors and initiatives, in addition to some of the exciting projects at Microsoft Research.

(Bob Stein):Was there an "aha" moment when you realized the potential that you had with Kinect?

Rick Rashid: For me, the “aha” moment was when I saw my two youngest children, 10 & 12, (my family was on the beta) they used it for the first time and what was interesting they weren’t just having fun playing the game and winning. They were having fun celebrating. They were jumping up and down and their character on the screen was doing exactly what they were doing.  It was that realization, it was the thing that was driving the experience for them that they were physically in the game, they were able to project themselves in a very real way, and to make a connection that people have never made with computers before.  And seeing that, and seeing the faces of these kids and that joy that I brought them. I thought “ok, I think we are really going to win with this.”

(Bob Stein): How do you think the upcoming release of the SDK will drive this further?

Rick Rashid: What I’m hoping is, the SDK that we are releasing, in just a bit now is really intended for research and for experimentation.  It is not a product SDK, it’s a research SDK.  My hope is what it will do is get people to really leverage work and technology with capabilities that we have in Kinect and to do more interesting projects and experiments. People have been really excited about Kinect because it’s It really shows that computers can do something, that people didn’t think computers could do before.  Researchers and people that who like experimenting with computers have been jumping on that, and saying here’s a very inexpensive piece of technology I can do experimentation on. What SDK will do is open up a significant set of new capabilities to those people who have not had access to before, in order to be able to try and do new things.

Read: Q&A with Rick Rashid, Senior VP, Microsoft Research

These articles are brought to you in partnership with ActiveWin.com.

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