Myo Thalmic Labs


Este proyecto utiliza la misma base que Kinect y similares para By cdn.iphoneros.com
Resolution: 480 x 410 · 39 kB · jpeg
Size: 480 x 410 · 39 kB · jpeg

This week Thalmic Labs’ Myo armband, designed to bridge the distance between man and machine, began to be sold through Amazon. Brent Balinski spoke to the company’s Chris Goodine about what the Myo offers, what it might be able to do in the future At Thalmic Labs, in the City of Kitchener in southern Ontario, Canada, a tight-knitted group of mechatronic engineers are working on an armband dubbed Myo, which lets you control games and software using your arm movements. Convincing people to let go of WATERLOO, ON -- (Marketwired) -- 03/02/15 -- Thalmic Labs, pioneers in the future of human-computer interaction, today announces the availability of its gesture control device, the Myo armband, on Amazon.com. Out of the box, the Myo armband detects five This year at CES we met with red-hot startup Thalmic Labs to see its Myo Armband in action. The Myo uses both motion and gestures to control digital devices—anything from games and applications on your PC to physical devices such as quadcopters or the One of the most intriguing might be the motion-control Myo Band, which looks like a punk rock arm band, but can interpret electrical signals from your muscles as gestures or movement. Made by Thalmic Labs, the $200 device hasn’t reached a broad enough Back in April 2013, the tech world was blown away by this video showing off an armband that gave its wearer the ability to control several different kinds of technology using basic hand gestures. It seemed fantastic, and you could pre-order your way into .

“Now think if we can take all those motions and actions and plug them into just about any computer or digital system, the possibilities are endless.” When the Myo ships in late 2013, Thalmic Labs will offer an open API so that developers can connect it About a year after getting our first taste of the Myo, Thalmic Labs has announced that it's reaching out to the masses by way of Amazon this quarter. As with its pre-order on the company's website, this muscle-sensing gesture control armband will be Myo from Thalmic Labs is one of those smart and deceptively simple-looking inventions that has the potential to change the way we work and live. It’s as easy to put on as a traditional armband, but is packed full of technology that lets it track both As stuff like Google Glass becomes mainstream, we’re going to see a lot more wearable computing devices around. But one thing that isn’t clear is how we’ll control them. One idea is to use gesture control, which would enable users to communicate with .





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