The MYO: Control Your Mac With Your Muscles Not Your Mouse

It’s not every day that a Mac accessory comes along and promises to give you superpowers, but that’s just what Thalmic Labs is promising with their innovative new armband today. Called the MYO, it’s a Bluetooth-enabled device that allows you to control your Mac, just by flexing your muscles.

Like the Kinect or Leap Motion, the MYO translates your body’s movements into computer input. Unlike those solutions, though, it doesn’t work using a camera. Instead, you simply loop an armband on and allow it to translate the electrical activity produced by your muscles into input a computer can work with.

There are a lot of possible uses. For example, you could stop iTunes just by clenching your fist, or multitask between apps simply by swiping with your fingers left or right. You could even, say, use the MYO to aim a weapon in a first person shooter, firing your gun when you actually “pull” the trigger.

“As a company, we’re interested in how we can use technology to enhance our abilities as humans – in short, giving us superpowers,” Stephen Lake, co-founder and CEO of Thalmic Labs said. “We’re excited to see how the MYO blurs the lines between us and digital technology.”

If you’re interested in the MYO, you can pre-order one today for just $149. The MYO API has also been launched, which should allow developers for Mac and iOS alike to do some very interesting things.

I’m eager to try this one out. Let’s hope the execution matches up to the promise.

Source: GetMYO
Via: The Next Web

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MLB At Bat Got A Huge Update Just In Time For Spring Training

The only time I ever really care about Major League Baseball is during the Spring. And that’s only because I live in Arizona, where half of the league’s teams come for Spring training, and I can go watch tons of all-stars play games for cheap.

Whether you love baseball or not, you can certainly appreciate the amount of work that goes into the MLB At Bat app. It’s got tons of information, video, and photos, and it got a big update just in time for Spring training.

MLB At Bat provides fans with live game radio, television broadcasts, play-by-play service, and more. All that awesomeness doesn’t come cheap though. You can buy a subscription for the high-end TV services of the app, which will cost you $130 per season. Or if you’re fine with just getting radio commentary, you opt for the cheaper, $20 per season subscription.

Some of the features of the update include:

Multi-platform live audio access for At Bat 13 subscribers (portable to Mac/PC with a valid MLB.com account) Universal support for At Bat 13 subscribers, accessible on iPhone, iPad and other supported smartphones and tablets Batting, pitching and fielding statistics (iPad) Re-designed individual team pages (iPhone) Updated news section interface (iPhone) Classic games library (iPhone and iPad) Re-architected navigations (iPhone and iPad) Additional push notification options (iPhone)

You can download MLB At Bat for both iPhone and iPad from the App Store for free.

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Source: iTunes

Via: iDB

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