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Molyneux Presents Milo And Kate At TED Conference

Peter Molyneux, Lionhead co-founder and Microsoft Game Studios creative director, demonstrated the Milo and Kate project at the TEDGlobal 2010 Conference, showing off the Kinect showpiece's capabilities and its potential as a consumer product.

Tom Curtis, Blogger

July 15, 2010

1 Min Read
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At the TEDGlobal 2010 Conference in Oxford, Lionhead co-founder and Microsoft Game Studios creative director Peter Molyneux demonstrated the Kinect-based Milo and Kate project. Milo and Kate promises to allow users to interact with a virtual child and his dog via the Xbox Kinect interface. Users can interact with the characters through voice and gesture based communication. According to the BBC, Molyneux explained that the software uses “psychological techniques” to simulate believable interaction; examples include subtle facial features, such as blushing or flared nostrils. While the software teaches players to interact with Milo, it simultaneously begins to recognize them. "After three-quarters of a hour, he recognizes you," said Molyneux. When users interact with Milo, they will influence how the virtual character evolves and behaves. Molyneux also mentioned that the software is cloud-based, indicating that Milo’s intelligence can increase over time. "His mind is based in the cloud," explained Molyneux. "As millions of people use it, Milo will get smarter." "I want to introduce a new revolution in storytelling," said Molyneux. "Films, TV, even hallowed books, are just rubbish because they don't involve me...It's a sea of blandness." Though there has been some discussion as to whether Milo will become a product, or whether it's pure research, the project is still under development. Microsoft has no current plans to release Milo and Kate, though Molyneux hinted that the game could eventually become a commercial product.

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2010

About the Author

Tom Curtis

Blogger

Tom Curtis is Associate Content Manager for Gamasutra and the UBM TechWeb Game Network. Prior to joining Gamasutra full-time, he served as the site's editorial intern while earning a degree in Media Studies at the University of California, Berkeley.

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