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Wednesday, December 29, 2010
USC Scientists Play World of Warcraft Using a Hacked Microsoft
Kinect System
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Researchers at USC. have hacked a Microsoft Kinect camera and gotten
it to control thepopular computer game, World of Warcraft.
The software they used is called Flexible Action and Articulated
Skeleton Toolkit or FAAST, a middleware to facilitate integration of
full-body control with games and VR applications using
OpenNI-compliant depth sensors, currently the PrimeSensor and the
Microsoft Kinect. The software is downloadable for free online.
FAAST is a software that uses the OpenNI framework (www.openni.org).
Built by USC's Institute for Creative Technologies, FAAST allows
users to play computer games with a Kinect motion-sensor camera by
translating body movements into the inputs that would otherwise be
triggered a keyboard and mouse, or a gaming controller with joysticks
and buttons.
A video on YouTube from the researchers shows off FAAST controlling
World of Warcraft computer game in which players control a customized
character in a land of witches and knights and gnomes.
FAAST is free to use and distribute for research and noncommercial
purposes. The preliminary version of FAAST is currently available for
Windows only, but Evan A. Suma, Belinda Lange, Skip Rizzo, David
Krum, and Mark Bolas, the developers of FAAST, are currently
preparing to release code as an open-source project. Additionally,
the team plans to develop a Linux port in the near future.
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