Myo Armband Video


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Thalmic Labs' Myo armband, a wearable tech device that responds to the electrical so users can control computer programs, video games, drones and smartphones. It is compatible with both iOS and Android operating systems. The Kitchener, Ont.- This week Thalmic Labs’ Myo armband, designed to bridge the distance between man Following this, Thalmic released a hugely popular promotional video in February 2013, displaying the armband being put to use to do things such as pilot a drone, control When last we checked in with Kitchener-Waterloo based Thalmic Labs, co-founder Stephen Lake said the company had shipped 24% of its 50,000 consumer pre-orders for the Myo armband Thalmic has also released a new video showing off some of the The team behind the development of the Myo gesture control armband Thalmic Labs, have announced this week that their new Myo armband will be available to purchase from Amazon in the next couple of months, opening the new technology up to the masses. Thalmic Labs, the Ontario company behind an armband that lets users control their devices with simple hand movements, is hoping to change the way people interact with technology. The Myo armband debuts on the retail market next month. “The Myo armband uses electromyographic (EMG These patterns can be programmed to trigger certain actions remotely in another software, like a video game or a CAD program. The same patterns can also be made to trigger operations in the control .

2013 saw the rise of gesture cameras for TVs and various smart devices, but Canadian startup Thalmic Labs thinks its Myo armband is the way forward. During our meeting at CES earlier, co-founder and CEO Stephen Lake explained that his Bluetooth 4.0 device A perfect example is the upcoming MYO armband from Canadian based Thalmic Labs that uses of muscles they have the best neurological control of. Here’s a cool video demonstrating the capabilities of MYO and some practical uses for the device” (Phys.org) —"Wave goodbye to camera-based gesture control." That is the confident directive coming from a one-year-old Waterloo, Ontario, startup called Thalmic Labs. The company is prepared to ship its next batch of wearable-computing armbands for Thalmic Labs’ product video shows off some pretty compelling use cases. Though I have to wonder just how sensitive the Myo armband is to slight shifts in muscle tissue to truly make it useable – they’ll also need to be able to rule out false .





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