A good example of the power and potential of hacking capabilities is Microsoft's (MSFT) Kinect. Microsoft introduced Kinect in November 2010 as a product extension to its Xbox franchise. Kinect adds a very cool capability for Xbox game players by getting rid of the hand held game controller and turning players into their own controllers. Microsoft and cool haven't been used in the same sentence for a long time. Kinect is cool.
Microsoft predictably launched Kinect with it's deeply ingrained proprietary product mind set. You could buy Kinect as a bundle with an Xbox or as a separate component to attach to an existing Xbox for $150. While Microsoft views Kinect as a product the global geek community views it as a capability. To geeks, Kinect is a powerful capability screaming to be hacked and repurposed for exciting new uses beyond its use as an Xbox extension. What a bargain for only $150. It's a hackers dream.
And hack they will. A crowd of makers, programmers, roboticists, and other assorted and sundry geeks are having at it to explore what Kinect can enable beyond Microsoft's initial intention. It's only a matter of time before we see new gesture based applications and platforms. How about gesture based health care and education applications to start?
Microsoft's initial knee-jerk reaction was as expected, negative. Initially the company was caught flat-footed saying it didn't condone product tampering and threatened legal action against hackers. Think, Apple (AAPL). However, I have to give Microsoft some credit, once market enthusiasm for Kinect became clear and sales starting taking off with 2.5 million of the motion sensors sold within the first month after launch, the company began to get open innovation religion. OK, maybe that's an exaggeration, but Microsoft stopped threatening hackers with legal action and at least publicly embraced hacker enthusiasm to explore new uses for Kinect. Maybe there is hope that Microsoft can be cool again!
Hacking capabilities can unleash new sources of value and solutions for many of the social system challenges we face today. We should encourage capability hackers and make it easier for them to work their magic. We need to try more stuff. Innovators, hack away. Experiment all the time.
This piece is adapted from The Business Model Innovation Factory. Saul Kaplan is the author of, The Business Model Innovation Factory. He is the founder and chief catalyst of the Business Innovation Factory (BIF) in Providence, RI, and blogs regularly at It's Saul Connected.