SAN FRANCISCO — What if shooting a target in a video game was as simple as pointing your finger? The Myo is a connected armband developed by Thalmic Labs that can sense not only your arm's position, ...
[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oWu9TFJjHaM?feature=player_embedded] Thalmic Labs today announced the launch of its MYO armband developer program. Interested ...
Imagine James Bond slipping an armband under his tuxedo jacket and using it to control a computer across the room, or even a spy drone. At Thalmic Labs, 007's device is a reality. The Waterloo, ...
Dan Graziano is an associate editor for CNET. His work has appeared on BGR, Fox News, Fox Business, and Yahoo News, among other publications. When he isn't tinkering with the latest gadgets and gizmos ...
The Myo Gesture Control Armband from Thalmic Labs aims to give you motion control without the need for a Wii remote, a presentation controller, or anything else you have to hold. Instead, you just ...
Over the last five years, the touchscreen has supplanted the mouse and keyboard as the primary way that many of us interact with computers. But will multitouch enjoy a 30-year reign like its ...
A few years ago, Thalmic Labs demonstrated its muscle-controlled Myo armband that promised to bring the world of gesture controls that looked so cool in "Minority Report" to life. For the past several ...
The Myo doesn't look like much: a slender black armband just below the elbow. But the intriguing inaugural product from Canadian startup Thalmic Labs stands to create a whole new way of interacting ...
The good: Easy-to-remember gestures; Accurate and fast gesture detection; Works with existing popular games. The bad: Expensive; Limited standalone game selection; Hard to troubleshoot. Who should buy ...