This programming guide implies that this is possible, so I figure what the heck.

Right now, though, it doesn't work.

Host OS is Vista 64-bit, VMWare Workstation 6.5.3 is running Windows 7 Enterprise 32-bit.

Installed Software on the VM:

  • Visual C# 2010 Express
  • Microsoft Server Speech Platform Runtime
  • Microsoft Server Speech Recognition Language - Kinect
  • Microsoft Speech Platform SDK
  • Kinect for Windows SDK Beta

I plug in the Kinect, the device is recognized by the VM, then I run the Sample Shape Game and it doesn't recognize the device. It says "Plug in the Kinect and try again" which turns out to be error 0x80080014, which leads to http://social.msdn.microsoft.com/Forums/en-US/kinectsdknuiapi/thread/4da8c75e-9aad-4dc3-bd83-d77ab4cd2f82/ which gives me two things to look at:

  1. is it plugged in with the special cable? yes
  2. are all 4 entries in the Device Manager? no

In the Device Manager, I see a "Microsoft Kinect" group containing Microsoft Kinect Audio Control, Microsoft Kinect Camera and Microsoft Kinect Device, but there is nothing under "Sound, video and game controllers" other than VMware VMaudio. "Kinect USB Audio" should be there.

I'm guessing that there is some further twiddling I have to do with the VMWare USB / hardware options (whatever that tray with the USB / CD / HD / floppy etc icons is called) or some deft combination of rebooting and (un)plugging, but I'm almost out of enthusiasm.

Any ideas? TIA

EDIT: I realized that I had some lingering drivers on my host (Vista) system from OpenKinect. After removing them, I can no longer see the Kinect at all in the VM. Hmm.

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I've tried it in Parallels Desktop 6 yesterday, and i had almost same problem with you. I'v got "NUI Uninitialized" with Skeletal Example, and no response with Sample Shape game. With Win7 Ultimate x64, Visual studio 2010 there's 3 entries in Device Manager, but "Kinect USB Audio" wasn't in "Sound, Video and Game controllers". now i'm trying to do with Parallels6+Win7x86 and VMware Fusion3+Win7x64. I think... there's 2 key problems with it, 1. recognizing "Kinect USB Audio" in Sound.... 2. usb hub problem... win7 in vm may recognize kinect hub with other usb devices. I think you also know that – Seth Oh Jun 19 '11 at 5:41
Same exact issue here. I have a win7 x64 host but want to do my development on a win7 x32 VM. I was thinking that installing it on the host first might make a difference but I don't want to chance messing up my host machine. – user809398 Jun 21 '11 at 23:07
@user809398 - caution is good - I installed VS 2010 Express / .NET 4.0 / Kinect API on a Windows 7 machine to test this out a few days ago and ended up breaking my existing VS 2008 TFS functionality. If you have any VS or .NET installs on the machine I'd definitely tread lightly. – Ed Norris Jun 22 '11 at 22:38
If the VM sees the device, it'll work. If not, it won't. This is similar to dealing with graphics acceleration in a VM, in that the difficulty (from the VM mfr's point of view) is in getting the VM to recognize and interact with the resource without trashing the driver state if something goes wrong. Doing this sort of thing really breaks the whole idea of a VM, anyway. – David Lively Jun 22 '11 at 22:54
Idea: get an external USB drive, put Win7 on it, and boot off of that. The drives are cheap and it'll give you most of the benefits of the VM. And (for the Mac guys who are about to go find and downvote every answer I've ever posted) you get to use a real operating system. – David Lively Jun 22 '11 at 22:55
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There is this on read.me

Virtual machines: You must run applications built with the Kinect for Windows SDK Beta in a native Windows environment. Kinect for Windows applications cannot run in a virtual machine, because the Microsoft Kinect drivers and this SDK Beta must be installed on the computer where the application is running.

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Yeah that's the sentence I understood as implying that it is possible - i.e., you can't run Kinect applications on the VM unless you have the drivers on the VM. – Ed Norris Jun 22 '11 at 22:23
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I'm not a Computer Scientist, but I thought Turing showed that a universal Touring Machine was basically the same as physical hardware. I've had Distributed COM+ running on 3 or 4 VM's on the same physical hardware, but somehow the Kinect device is different? I don't buy that at all.

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just to share that (not really understood how) VM Workstation 8 running in a host win 7 x64 with guest OS Ubuntu 10.04 sucessfully detected and installed Kinect drivers.

I was able to test it with libfreenect (OpenKinect Project) http://openkinect.org/wiki/Getting_Started#Manual_Build_on_Linux

best regards,

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