Thalmic Myo Armband


Stephen Lake shows off a prototype of the Myo gesture control armband By www.cbc.ca
Resolution: 300 x 487 · 60 kB · jpeg
Size: 300 x 487 · 60 kB · jpeg

Waterloo, Ont.-based Thalmic Labs released its arm band that allows users to interact with computers with a wave or a flick of the wrist for sale on Amazon.com on Monday. Previously only available as part of a developer’s kit, the Myo armband is moving After being available to developers for some time, Thalmic Labs’ Myo wristband is available on Amazon.com as of Monday. The gesture control device, built by Waterloo’s Thalmic Labs, has long served as a wow-factor piece of Canadian technology, evoking WATERLOO, ON--(Marketwired - Mar 2, 2015) - 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 Thalmic Labs, the company behind Myo, has been growing a community to help support and create more for the armband. Expect to see new applications in the Myo Market as more users test out and develop new ways to use and experience the device. The goal is 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 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. As of yesterday, that number is now 100%. With pre-orders fulfilled .

Thalmic Labs' Myo armband, a wearable tech device that responds to the electrical signals in your arm muscles, is now for sale on Amazon.com for $199 US. However, Canadian customers who haven't pre-ordered a Myo will have to wait a little to get their 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 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 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 .





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