This section provides an overview of what kinect is, and why a developer might want to use it.
It should also mention any large subjects within kinect, and link out to the related topics. Since the Documentation for kinect is new, you may need to create initial versions of those related topics.
Detailed instructions on getting kinect set up or installed.Setting Up a Kinect Sensor
Kinect for Windows 1.5, 1.6, 1.7, 1.8
Here are some simple steps to get your Kinect sensor up and running.
Step 1: Mount the Sensor on a Stable Surface
Place the sensor on a stable surface in a location where it will not fall or be struck during use. Here are some other tips.
Do not place the Kinect on or in front of a speaker or on a surface that vibrates or makes noise.
Keep the Kinect out of direct sunlight.
Use the Kinect within its specified operating temperature range of 41 to 95 degrees Fahrenheit (5 to 35 degrees Celsius). If the sensor is exposed to an environment outside of its prescribed temperature range, turn it off and allow the temperature to stabilize within the specified range before you use the sensor again.
Do not tilt a Kinect on its base. Manually tilting the Kinect can damage the sensor. The Kinect tilt angle is controlled by software; see Kinect Explorer - WPF C# Sample for an example.
Step 2: Install the Kinect for Windows SDK
If you haven't done so already, download and install the free SDK from the Kinect for Windows download page.
If you haven't done so already, download and install the free Developer Toolkit from the Kinect for Windows download page.
Step 3: Plug in your Kinect sensor
Connect the power supply for your Kinect to an external power source.
Connect the Kinect to a USB port on your PC and wait for Windows to recognize it.
All the drivers, including audio, will load seamlessly.
When you install the Kinect for Windows SDK, the installation package includes the Kinect drivers. When the Kinect drivers are installed on a Windows-based PC, a Kinect that is plugged into the PC's USB port appears as a multicomponent USB device.
There is a known issue regarding USB host controller compatibility.
After loading the drivers, you need to set up your development environment. If you are using Visual Studio, continue with Configuring the Development Environment to help you create your first C# or C++ application.
Troubleshooting Tips
The following tips will help you get started using your Kinect:
If a non-Microsoft driver for the Kinect is installed on your computer, the Kinect for Windows drivers might not install or function correctly. To fix this, uninstall the non-Microsoft drivers before installing the Kinect for Windows SDK.
Connect the power supply for the Kinect to an external power source; if the Kinect has only power from the USB connection, it will be minimally functional and light the LED, but it must be connected to an external power source to be fully functional.
No tools are required for calibration of audio and video.
Your Kinect should be the only device plugged into a USB hub on your computer. If you have more than one Kinect, connect them to different USB controllers. If 2 hubs are connected to the same controller, only 1 Kinect can work at a time.
The Kinect is protected from overheating by a fan. It is controlled by the sensor's firmware, which turns off the camera at 90 degrees Celsius. There is no software interface for applications to control the fan.
Reasonable lighting, neither extremely dark nor extremely bright, is important for capturing images with the RGB camera. Incandescent, fluorescent, and natural lighting provide no special obstacles, but do not point an intense or constant light source at the camera because this can blind the RGB sensor.
The depth sensor functions adequately in typical and reduced lighting, although in near darkness there is increased noise in the signal.
The depth sensor reads depth information from reflected light. Objects that are highly reflective (mirrors and shiny metal) or highly absorptive (fluffy and/or dark materials) may not be registered by the depth sensor as successfully as other objects.
Linux
Ubuntu/Debian Official packages
Starting from Ubuntu 11.10 (Oneiric) and Debian 7 (Wheezy), Ubuntu and Debian provide official packages of libfreenect. You can install them easily in a console:
$ sudo apt-get install freenect
In Ubuntu 12.04 the gspca kernel driver prevent libfreenect from claiming the Kinect device in user-mode. Either remove and blacklist the module
$ sudo modprobe -r gspca_kinect
$ sudo modprobe -r gspca_main
$ echo "blacklist gspca_kinect" |sudo tee -a /etc/modprobe.d/blacklist.conf
or install a recent versions of libfreenect that can automatically detach the kernel driver by adding Florian Echtler libtisch PPA (see below) with updated libfreenect packages for Ubuntu 12.04.
The freenect device is accessible to any user belonging to the group 'plugdev'. By default, a desktop user belongs to the plugdev group but if you need to add them to the group:
$ sudo adduser $USER plugdev
then log out and log in again NeuroDebian repository
If you want a recent version of libfreenect no matter which version of Debian or Ubuntu you use, backports of the latest release of libfreenect for all supported version of Debian and Ubuntu (namely Ubuntu Lucid(10.04), Maverick (10.10), Natty (11.04), Oneiric (11.10) and Debian Squeeze and Wheezy at the time of writing) are available on NeuroDebian repository . The packages available there are created by the maintainers of the official Debian package and follows the standards of Debian/Ubuntu.
To enable the NeuroDebian repository:
$ wget -O- http://neuro.debian.net/lists/$(lsb_release -cs).us-nh | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/neurodebian.sources.list
$ sudo apt-key adv --recv-keys --keyserver pgp.mit.edu 2649A5A9
$ sudo apt-get update
Installing libfreenect is the same as before:
$ sudo apt-get install freenect
Make sure your user belongs to the plugdev group (The default for a desktop user) to access the device without the root privileges. If it is not the case, add them by:
$ sudo adduser $USER plugdev
and log out and log in again libtisch PPA
An Ubuntu launchpad ppa for Lucid(10.04), Maverick (10.10), Natty (11.04), Oneiric (11.10) and Pangolin (12.04) is available at this link.
to use it, open a console and execute:
$ sudo add-apt-repository ppa:floe/libtisch
$ sudo apt-get update
After that, you can use:
$ sudo apt-get install libfreenect libfreenect-dev libfreenect-demos
This will install libfreenect, the development headers, and the demo applications.
After that, you need to add yourself to the 'video' group and log back in. The package already includes the necessary rules for the udev daemon so that accessing the device will be possible for users in the group video.
$ sudo adduser $USER video
be sure to log out and back in. You don't need to reboot, just plug in the kinect device right now (if it was already connected, unplug and plug back in).
To start the demo applications use:
$ freenect-glview
Problems with accessing device
In case of problems, run
$ lsusb | grep Xbox
which should list 3 devices
> lsusb | grep Xbox Bus
> 001 Device 021: ID 045e:02ae Microsoft Corp. Xbox NUI Camera Bus 001
> Device 019: ID 045e:02b0 Microsoft Corp. Xbox NUI Motor Bus 001 Device
> 020: ID 045e:02ad Microsoft Corp. Xbox NUI Audio
If they are not present, run
echo -1 | sudo tee -a /sys/module/usbcore/parameters/autosuspend
and reconnect Kinekt and Kinect Camera
should be listed
You find all demo applications starting with the freenect- prefix. Ubuntu Manual Install
Quick copy-paste instructions to get up-and-running instantly:
sudo apt-get install git-core cmake libglut3-dev pkg-config build-essential libxmu-dev libxi-dev libusb-1.0-0-dev
git clone git://github.com/OpenKinect/libfreenect.git
cd libfreenect
mkdir build
cd build
cmake ..
make
sudo make install
sudo ldconfig /usr/local/lib64/
sudo freenect-glview
Note: If you getting an error saying apt-get cannot find libglut3, you might be on a newer version of Ubuntu that has freeglut3-* instead of libglut3-*, so your initial apt-get install would look like:
sudo apt-get install git-core cmake freeglut3-dev pkg-config build-essential libxmu-dev libxi-dev libusb-1.0-0-dev
To use Kinect as a non-root user do the following:
sudo adduser $USER video
Also make a file with rules for the Linux device manager:
sudo nano /etc/udev/rules.d/51-kinect.rules
Copy and paste:
# ATTR{product}=="Xbox NUI Motor"
SUBSYSTEM=="usb", ATTR{idVendor}=="045e", ATTR{idProduct}=="02b0", MODE="0666"
# ATTR{product}=="Xbox NUI Audio"
SUBSYSTEM=="usb", ATTR{idVendor}=="045e", ATTR{idProduct}=="02ad", MODE="0666"
# ATTR{product}=="Xbox NUI Camera"
SUBSYSTEM=="usb", ATTR{idVendor}=="045e", ATTR{idProduct}=="02ae", MODE="0666"
# ATTR{product}=="Xbox NUI Motor"
SUBSYSTEM=="usb", ATTR{idVendor}=="045e", ATTR{idProduct}=="02c2", MODE="0666"
# ATTR{product}=="Xbox NUI Motor"
SUBSYSTEM=="usb", ATTR{idVendor}=="045e", ATTR{idProduct}=="02be", MODE="0666"
# ATTR{product}=="Xbox NUI Motor"
SUBSYSTEM=="usb", ATTR{idVendor}=="045e", ATTR{idProduct}=="02bf", MODE="0666"
Be sure to log out and back in.
If you can't access or still need root privileges to use your device: in some cases there might be conflicts between permissions of two drivers installed (libfreenect and primesense). If this is your case, try reinstalling primesense's sensor driver and keep only primesense's rules file /etc/udev/rules.d/55-primesense-usb.rule
s, removing the /etc/udev/rules.d/51-kinect.rules
file if you created it.