Zachary Amaranth said:
SeventhSigil said:
I mean that when I first read the article last year, one of the first things that had popped into my head was that, at the time, the Kinect wasn't really a wide-spread peripheral, and its sales had kind of sputtered.
Touché. That makes more sense. Although they may have been hoping for a more ubiquitous reception, as it was filed originally only a couple months after Kinect's launch. Although it describes features that may fit Kinect 2.0 better. Then again, it also talks about wireless transmission and mobile devices, so I don't know.
Aye, true. However, there is also the matter of the timing; the Kinect was launched in 2010, but the patent wasn't even filed til 2011, much less finalized until 2012. It seems odd that they wouldn't have considered this application during development, although it could be argued that the device's initial success in the half-year or so after launch, with three quarters of a million sold during Black Friday 2011, made them consider more widespread applications.
On the other hand, 2012 was the time that rumors and news about the Xbox One, then codenamed Durango, began to filter from the woodwork, suggesting that developers were getting prototype dev kits to work on, so clearly development of the newest console was puttering along quite nicely by this point. If they had begun to consider such applications of the Kinect beforehand, and in designing a console, a year isn't too large a gap from conceptualization to research to prototype construction, and then realized that the key would be to make sure it was suitably widespread throughout their market to actually enforce any such policies...
Well, think about the 24 hour check-in. It was supposed to check in with home base, so to speak, and help fight piracy. Might not have just been game piracy.
Eh. In all honesty, the problem with this sort of stuff is that you can come up with a number of legitimate surface reasons (one person pointed out to be that such a technology would be useful in a home product using pay per view, to prevent a bar from hooking it up to the TV for Fight Night, as apparently bars are expected to pay through the nose for the service, and this would theoretically prevent them from abusing it,) and a number of somewhat less cheery ones. But both the nefarious and the understandable ones have holes. The bar scenario, for example, not taking into account that a suitably determined businessman could find ways around the Kinect, even if it means turning it the other way, and having one guy paid to sit in front of like the 'proper audience.' Or that such restrictions would theoretically apply to a large Superbowl party in a frathouse just like they would a crowded bar.
It could be said the mention of wireless transmission and mobile devices means they weren't considering the Kinect; it could mean they were thinking of extending it to other devices or applications as well as the Kinect; it could just be a smokescreen to conceal any intentions they had, as spelling out 'It's For The Kinect' would be a terrible idea. Unless the patent is actually used, and content becomes moderated in this way, we'll probably never know for sure. xP It is enough, however, to convince me not to get an X1, at least as nothing but an Exclusive-Only platform down the line.