By using this site, you agree to our Privacy Policy and our Terms of Use. Close

Per the Hollywood Reporter article:

 

Microsoft's New Xbox One: THR's Guided First Look

Voice control, an option to record game play, and a camera that follows you during Skype conversations are among the features The Hollywood Reporter saw during a visit to preview the anticipated gaming consul.

On Wednesday, I visited the Microsoft Experience LA – their fancy loft space in Venice – for a walk-through of what Microsoft hopes will be a radical redefinition of the home entertainment experience. And, judging by the hour I spent, it will involve quite a bit of shouting in your living room.
 
Okay, maybe shouting is a bit of an exaggeration, but the thing that my amiable guide was so keen to show off was the voice control. Thanks to the Kinect unit – the motion-sensing microphone and camera device that rests under/over your TV screen – much of the Xbox One’s features can be activated using your voice. You can switch between apps, pause your game, switch to – and control – live TV, switch back to the game, open up a smaller window for any of those apps, all on the fly. And the system – thanks to Kinect’s biometric sensors – can recognize who is sitting in front of it and log you in. When you're making a Skype call, which you can right from your couch, the Kinect camera will follow you if you get up and walk around; it'll zoom in if you're alone, pull out if there's a group. And there is nothing at all sinister about that.


 
The actual playing of games wasn’t a focus for this guided tour – I did spend about 45 seconds playing Forza Motorsport 5, and it looked stunning – but the recording, editing and sharing of gameplay footage was. And if recording 30-second clips of you crashing into walls is your thing, then the Xbox One has a rather robust little post-production suite that’ll let you edit those clips and share them on Xbox Live (their online network/community). So far that’s the only place you can share those clips – no connectivity for, say, Facebook or YouTube, but they claim to be working on it.
 
They are really trying to make the Xbox One – which I am really trying not to shorthand into “Xbone” – the One Thing you need in your living room. Until we can do just that – the unit goes on sale (for $499.99 suggested retail) on Nov. 22 – the jury’s still out.

 

Source : http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/microsofts-xbox-one-a-guided-654531

 



It is near the end of the end....