Harnessing muscular activity to provide computer input has many advantages over Kinect-like devices that use cameras or inertial sensors. A new gesture-based wireless input device that works by ...
As a kid you might have imagined having the ability to move objects from across the room with simple hand gestures. Whatever you wanted, it was yours, no matter what got in the way. Whoever said that ...
Designed primarily for gesture control of electronic devices, it's normally worn on the arm, and is equipped with accelerometers, gyroscopes and surface electromyography electrodes – the latter detect ...
Technology company Thalmic Labs demos its new Myo armband gesture controlled tracking for video games in this exclusive interview with Stephen Lake at GDC 2015. Subscribe for daily gaming ...
Thalmic’s current offering is the Myo armband, which was released to the public in 2014 and reads the electrical activity of the wearer’s muscles for hands-free control of technology through motion.
Myo Armband: Worth $200? -- Digits There's been a lot of buzz around Thalmic Labs’ Myo, a motion controlled arm band that can replace your computer mouse. The WSJ's Eva Tam tells us how it works and ...
Gesture-based games and controls like those in the Kinect hold a lot of promise, but the complex camera setup isn't always practical. A new device called Myo, however, removes the camera from the ...
Gadget fans can't wait to get their hands on Myo, an armband that controls PowerPoint or Keynote presentations, videogames, toy drones, music and various software programs through simple hand gestures ...
You’ve seen the film Minority Report, where Tom Cruise is waving his hands around a virtual world to control everything around him? The Myo armband by Thalmic Labs brings that on-screen wizardry a ...