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The CEO himself demonstrated new Kinect avatar software that will more closely mimic game players' behaviors and facial expressions after an update this spring. Microsoft also said that this spring, people who have Xbox and Kinect will be able to wave their hands or speak aloud to browse and play video from NetFlix and Hulu. This was Ballmer's third year leading the gadget show address. He took the mantle from Microsoft co-founder and chairman, Bill Gates, who had used the stage for the preceding 10 years to talk about his vision for the future of technology. Gates used the opportunity to predict the rise of PCs in U.S. homes, the arrival of portable touch screens that would display Internet content and music streamed from a home PC and the advent of even simple gadgets such as pens that can connect to the Internet. He was not always right about the timing, or the specific device or software that would bring about the revolution. A most memorable case in point: the tablet computer. Gates talked about it a decade ago, but it is only in the last year that the tablet
-- a slim touch-screen computer with no keyboard -- has caught consumers' imaginations in a big way. Ballmer took over Gates' role as CEO but not as company visionary; as such, his pronouncements have not seemed as grand or oracle-like. But people will be paying particularly close attention this year, seeking signs that Microsoft has made progress since Ballmer took the stage one year ago.
During the keynote, a Microsoft employee walked the audience through the features in Windows Phone 7, the company's answer to the iPhone and Android that launched toward the end of 2010. Microsoft said it will update the phone software in the next few months to make it faster and to support copying and pasting. Windows Phone 7 devices will also become available for Verizon Wireless and AT&T Inc. networks. Windows Phone 7 has a lot of catching up to do in terms of both the number of users and the number of "apps" available for the phones. On Wednesday, handset makers Motorola Mobility Inc., HTC Corp. and Samsung Electronics Co. showed off several upcoming smart phones that will run on AT&T Inc.'s higher-speed "HSPA+" network. All the phones will run a version of Android, not Windows. Microsoft also showed an updated version of Surface, with new technology that lets thin LCD screens recognize objects placed on top without the use of cameras.
[Associated
Press;
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