The Palm Beach Post

Windows 10 to add 3-D tools next year

Microsoft also hopes to compete with Apple with its Surface Studio.

- Associated Press

Microsoft wants to bring life to common computing experience­s by adding a third dimension to widely used software such as Windows and Office.

The new tools, part of a free “Creators Update” to Windows 10 early next year, promise to make it easy for people to create and share photos, drawings and other images in 3-D.

Microsoft also announced a high-end desktop called Surface Studio. Costing about $3,000, the Studio will be targeted at creators such as architects, artists and engineers, many of whom have long used Apple’s Mac computers. The Studio’s 28-inch display is on a flexible hinge, so users can view it straight on, or tilt it to as low as 20 degrees for drafting. Wednesday’s announceme­nts in New York come a day before Apple is expected to refresh its Mac lineup.

S a t y a Nade l l a , Mi c r o s o f t ’s CEO, said innovation­s over the past decade have been focused on “helping us consume more informatio­n and media in different formats.” He said the next decade will be defined by technology that empowers people to create.

Jan Dawson, an analyst with Jackdaw Research, said Microsoft has been pushing business products and services lately. Dawson said the company “has needed a rallying point for a set of efforts around consumer use c ase s, and it appears to have decided on creativity as the catchphras­e for this push.”

Dawson said that Microsoft seems to be challengin­g not just Apple’s success with profession­al creators, but wants to embrace a broader base of consumers, too.

While the Studio will likely be a niche product, the Windows update will have broader reach.

With the 3-D tools, for instance, instead of taking a regular photo of a sand castle in two dimensions a beachgoer will be able to scan all sides of the castle with a phone. Microsoft’s tools will convert that into 3-D; viewers can rotate the virtual sand castle on the screen with their fingers. Microsoft plans to make it easy to share that on social media and even send to 3-D printers.

Business presentati­ons can be enhanced as 3-D support comes to PowerPoint; you can rotate an object to focus on a particular angle. Microsoft’s image-editing software Paint will also enable people to create 3-D artworks by combining existing 2-D images with newly scanned objects in three dimensions. Microsoft is launching a service called Remix 3D for people to share and showcase their 3-D creations.

A n o t h e r Wi n d ows f e a t u re promises help people communicat­e more easily with friends and family.

Windows will try to make multiple apps for video calls, email and chats seamless by letting users simply choose the person to send to rather than the app to send with. Microsoft, maker of the Xbox gaming console, will also offer live broadcasti­ng of game play.

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