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Seamlessly Transferring Files Between Devices With A Fingertip [Video] MYO : un brassard pour se transformer en Jedi. Dans le domaine de la reconnaissance des mouvements, l’imagination est visiblement la seule limite.

MYO : un brassard pour se transformer en Jedi

Après le Kinect de Microsoft, le Move de Sony ou encore le Leap Motion pour Mac et PC, la start-up Thalmic Labs a mis au point MYO, un brassard usant d’une technologie peu commune pour piloter une interface ou des objets communicants. MYO se porte à l’avant bras et interprète les mouvements de la main, des doigts et du bras en analysant l’activité électrique des muscles. New Tangible Interfaces by Eunhee Jo. GOAB. A TV Experience Concept. Lamps: 24 Rules for smart light. Lamps: Dumb things, smart light. NANO Supermarket commercial. Midemlab 2013 : 7 start-ups françaises distinguées. Horror Film Uses Audience's Phones As Part Of The Plot. Nobody enjoys the glow from someone else’s smartphone distracting them during a film’s climax.

Horror Film Uses Audience's Phones As Part Of The Plot

But Dutch filmmaker Bobby Boermans is encouraging moviegoers to keep their phones out during his latest movie, the aptly called App, by inviting them to download a free app prior to watching the movie which displays content synced with the horror movie. The thriller follows psychology student Anna Rijnders, who is obsessed with social media and finds herself transfixed by a mysterious app, called Iris (not so subtly Siri spelled backwards) that sends her cryptic codes. Any audience with the app will receive the same codes as Anna on their phones throughout the movie, as well as other content that adds another dimension of interaction to their movie-watching experience. The movie uses digital watermarking, connecting to the phone’s speaker, to send synced content to the smartphones. The movie works perfectly without the second screen.