Intel Has Computers That Know When You're Having A Bad Day
Intel Corporation
Intel has been talking about RealSense for a while, and even launched a dedicated YouTube channel for the technology. But this is the first time RealSense has seemed like anything more than Xbox Kinect for desktops. Now, it seems to have feeling.
Or at least it can sense yours. This week Intel showed off a bunch of its new quirks to a small group of press in New York City, BetaBeat says. The RealSense 3D cameras will be able to sense basic human emotions like happiness, sadness, and even frustration and exhaustion, by analyzing the shape of lips, eyes, and cheeks, a Intel spokesperson Ellen Healy told Business Insider in an email.
Healy explained with 1080p resolution and high quality depth sensors, the RealSense 3D cameras can remove backgrounds, perform 3D scans, and recognize 10-finger gestures. Intel also had a robot at the New York City demonstration, claiming that it too would have 3D sensing tech, BetaBeat said.
"People have 3D sensing, so the robot should have 3D sensing like us," CTO of perceptual computing Achin Bhowmik told BetaBeat. "It will recognize you, read your emotions. 'Why are you sad today? Should I sing you a song?' The future is crazy."
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