back to article Meaningful gesture: Thalmic Labs Myo motion sensing armband

For years, the way we interact with computers hasn't much changed. Keyboards and mice have been the mainstay of computing for decades. Of course, there have been experiments, like clunky VR gloves, and more successful gizmos like Kinect. Leap Motion, for example, tried to bring gesture control to your PC in 2013, where it …

  1. Known Hero
    Paris Hilton

    optional Api

    Whenever your browser is in privacy mode it deactivates the device ;)

  2. Cuddles

    Masturbation

    OK, with that out of the way, all these notion control things seem to forget one very important point - if you're not more convenient than the alternatives, no-one is going to care. Why would I want to drop £200 for the privilege of being able to control Netflix by flailing around wildly when I can achieve exactly the same using a remote or a mouse? Why would I want to be required to act out a charades routine when giving a presentation when a pointer or mouse works just as well? Or rather better, given that you'd appear to need a pointer in addition to this thing anyway. Motion controls have failed every time so far because they invariably make controls less accurate and less convenient.

    1. Nigel Whitfield.

      Re: Masturbation

      The presentation mode does include an on screen pointer. But yes, while it's a neat idea I have mixed feelings about how useful it could be. I suspect that it may be a boon to people with some conditions who may find using other types of controller difficult, but for a lot of us you're entirely right that a normal remote is likely to be simpler for a presentation.

      1. James 51

        Re: Masturbation

        A lot more difficult for the little nipper to pick up and use when you're not there and you're less likely to set your arm down somewhere and then forget where it is when the break comes on.

        1. TRT Silver badge

          Re: Masturbation

          Until you pop into the kitchen to make a cup of tea and have a wank, only to come back into the lounge and find that your smart TV is now tuned to QVC and you've ordered thirteen gross of Disney Princess™ hand towels, an illuminated jacuzzi and booked a 14 day holiday for three to a Swedish cheese farm.

          1. Known Hero
            Paris Hilton

            Re: Masturbation

            I do wonder if we keep replying to this topic that the Reg might get top spot in google for masturbation ?

            1. Franklin

              Re: Masturbation

              Dunno about masturbation, but I did get one of these and an Arduino with a Bluetooth and a motor control shield, wrote some software for my laptop, connected the Arduino to a vibrator, and made a gesture controlled sex toy. It's kind of fun, winding up a girlfriend just by gesture, though in fairness I doubt it will ever be a killer app.

              1. Nigel Whitfield.

                Re: Masturbation

                Some observers may notice that in one of the screenshots, I've hooked it up to work with my estim control software...

  3. Snivelling Wretch

    Certainly an interesting start, and I'm sure there are niche use cases. Perhaps surgery where the surgeon could perhaps zoom in on a camera feed, or move around 3D scans, etc, without having to touch anything?

    1. Nigel Whitfield.

      Maybe; I was chatting about it in the pub last night with someone who manages band tours, and we thought it could be handy for some of that - giving another way of controlling some aspects of a performance, without having to step away from the mic, for example.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Would be useful for my Halloween SFX when handing out the treats. At the moment to trigger some effects needs me to press the appropriate button on a remote control. It would add to the effect to be able to use an abracadabra motion with my hands/arms or a flourish of a wand.

  4. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Just don't scratch your nose...

  5. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Leg

    Presumably it would also work if it is attached to your leg just below the knee.

    Might even be a more accurate way of tracking exercise movements.

    1. Nigel Whitfield.
      Thumb Up

      Re: Leg

      I don't see why not - all it's doing is reading the electrical signals beneath the skin. Obviously the calibration is set up with arms in mind, but you can create your own profile or even access the raw EMG data.

      So, you might need to do some fiddling to come up with appropriate gestures, but I don't see why not. Maybe I'll have a play later and see what I can make it do.

  6. dbayly

    I have one

    I bought 2, one for a friend with extreme hand problems and one for me to maybe extend its capabilities for the friend, if it worked out. It's slightly irritating, it kept wanting me to re-sync my gestures. My friend had problems using ti also. In the end its a bit too limite. It does work to pause videos from the lounge though.

    Myo didn't live up to the potential as optimistically predicted by its Kickstarter campaign. I've not had a great run with Kickstarter projects, at least this one delivered.

  7. Yugguy

    Looks AWESOME

    To give it some credit, it looks proper techie.

  8. David 132 Silver badge

    Douglas Adams, as usual, nailed it

    Sigh. Another of these periodic attempts to map the "wow omg technology is so cooool" mindset of the !Bong¡ Startup Set into real life - and it will fail.

    Douglas Adams characterized the biggest problem with gesture-based technology far, far better than I ever could:

    "The machine was rather difficult to operate. For years radios had been operated by means of pressing buttons and turning dials; then as the technology became more sophisticated the controls were made touch-sensitive--you merely had to brush the panels with your fingers; now all you had to do was wave your hand in the general direction of the components and hope. It saved a lot of muscular expenditure, of course, but meant that you had to sit infuriatingly still if you wanted to keep listening to the same program. "

    Bah.

  9. lnLog

    Limited by evolution

    Humans evolved to make large motions with limbs; moving from one place to another, lifting things etc. and manipulate small things with small precision movements of the hands.

    For the vast proportion of the population with no handicaps it is most efficient to use the small precision movements that hands are capable of. In our high data rate environment hands are the only thing that is going to cut it, and until a device is capable of operating with minimal force and displacement, whilst maintaining accuracy / minimising false readings it is not going to succeed.

    We are constrained by our anatomy and I cant see the mouse and keyboard begin replaced until we have reliable brain interface translators to bypass our collection of bones and muscles.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Limited by evolution

      "[...] until we have reliable brain interface translators to bypass our collection of bones and muscles."

      Whether we execute thought actions is undecided until we actually activate the limbs or vocal chords. So any cyber interface ends up as having to depend on the nerve signals to the muscles. Merely thinking about something can be a "shall I - shan't I?" internal conversation in which we might "practice" the move several times before deciding what to do.

  10. Ru'

    Apart from use by those with disabilities, it's another fail as far as I can see. Cars have used the same design for a steering device for over 100 years, and there's no way I'd start a business with a new scheme to control direction when the existing method works fine...

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      "[...] and there's no way I'd start a business with a new scheme to control direction when the existing method works fine..."

      That inertia and vested interest causes big companies to go bust when someone introduces a disrupting technology. It happened in tyres and photography.

  11. annodomini2

    Couple of major weaknesses

    1. It needs to be on bare skin.

    2. I'd put money it suffers from the same problem with Subvocal comms devices, in that once you take it off and then put it back on, it will need to be recalibrated as it is never in the same place.

POST COMMENT House rules

Not a member of The Register? Create a new account here.

  • Enter your comment

  • Add an icon

Anonymous cowards cannot choose their icon