Thalmic launches app market for Myo armband
TheRecord
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Nov. 5, 2015
Thalmic Labs has launched an online marketplace where users of its Myo armband can choose from more than 100 applications for the device that reads electrical signals in arm muscles to control digital technology.
Myo partners with DJ Armin Van Buuren to make beautiful, gesture-controlled music
CNET
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Nov. 19, 2014
Thalmic Lab's gesture control Myo-armband has partnered with its first musician, Grammy-nomianted DJ Armin Van Buuren, to bring gesture control to his live performances -- potentially using the armband to control lights, video, effects and even sound, using a custom integration built especially for Van Buuren by Haute Technique.
Hand Gesture Armband Integrates With Google Glass
Forbes
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Aug. 20, 2014
Thalmic Labs, the Canadian startup behind Myo, an armband which lets a wearer control movements on a screen with a flick of the wrist has announced a slew of partnerships with developers to make it easier for people in industries like healthcare and construction to use Google Glass as they go about their workday.
The Myo Motion Control Armband: Hands On
Mashable
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July 31, 2014
Lance Ulanoff, Chief Correspondent and Editor-at-Large of Mashable reviews Myo from Thalmic Labs as one of "those smart and deceptively simple-looking inventions that has the potential to change the way we work and live”.
Thalmic Labs begins shipping motion-control armbands
CBC
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July 30, 2014
Thalmic Labs, a startup in Kitchener, Ontario, is shipping pre-orders of its highly anticipated Myo armband, the latest innovation in the burgeoning field of wearable tech. The device allows users to control and manipulate computers, video games, smartphones, robotic devices, drones, and other technology with arm gestures and movements. The company says Myo uses a new type of biosensor, which can pick up electrical impulses in a person's arm muscles.
The Myo Armband wants to do away with your computer mouse
HITC Tech
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July 16, 2014
Causing a stir on the internet is a new wearable device known as the Myo. Coming from startup Thalmic Labs the Myo is a one-size-fits-all armband that can be used to interact with your computer by simply moving your arm around.
The Myo Armband Wants To Kill Your Computer Mouse
The Huffington Post
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July 15, 2014
A startup called Thalmic Labs is on the verge of releasing the Myo, an armband that allows you to interact with a computer through motion commands. Sensors in the device measure the motion and electrical activity of a person's arm, allowing it to figure out the specific hand gesture someone is making.
Thalmic Labs Unveils Final Design of the Myo Armband
Electronic Products and Technology
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June 12, 2014
Waterloo-based Thalmic Labs has revealed the final design for its gesture control device, the Myo armband. The state-of-the-art industrial design is a thin, expandable band, which is nearly half the thickness of the Myo Alpha units that were given to select developers and partners over the past six months.
Myo Motion-Sensing Armband: First Look at the Wearable’s Finished Design
Wall Street Journal
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June 11, 2014
Last year, a Canadian startup called Thalmic Labs showed off the Myo motion-sensing, muscle-reading armband, which gets us one step closer to the VR of our dreams—by freeing up our hands. Now the company has a final hardware design for the $149 Myo, and says that it will begin shipping in September.
Myo, the latest in gesture control
The Hindu
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April 22, 2014
Thalmic Labs' Myo device is more sophisticated than Kinect, and is built to read the smallest activity in your muscle. You can take it with your wherever you go, and this portability makes it the unanimous choice over Kinect. The device defines the future of air gesture control.
Canadian Startup Thalmic Labs is a Leader in Kickstarting Human Computer Interaction
RightStartups
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Nov. 25, 2013
Thalmic Labs is one of rapidly growing startups in Canada. It is dedicated to develop various wearable gadgets for gesture controlling and human computer interaction. The Waterloo, Ontario-based firm is recognized as one of the hottest startups in Canada, a country always known for impressive small businesses.
THALMIC LABS' MYO WRISTBAND AIMED AT DISRUPTING WEARABLE TECH
Yahoo! News
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Aug. 20, 2013
If you haven’t already heard about wearable technology, it won't be long before you do. Devices like Google Glass and Jawbone are already nearly household names, but soon, a new gesture control armband, called MYO, will be in the ranks of recognizable wearable tech brands.
THALMIC LABS GETS TWO EX-BLACKBERRY EXECS TO HELP THE MYO ARMBAND SUCCEED
TechCrunch
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Aug. 14, 2013
Thalmic Labs has picked up some heavyweight senior talent in its quest to bring the MYO gesture control armband device to market. Both are ex-BlackBerry, and both bring a lot of experience in the management of a consumer devices company, and in the supply chain for producing said devices.
THALMIC LABS ANNOUNCES NEW HIRES: NO UPDATES ON ITS ANTICIPATED MYO ARMBAND
PandoDaily
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Aug. 14, 2013
It seems like every month there’s a new update about the Waterloo-based Thalmic Labs. First there was its $14.5 million Series A announcement, and then the launch of the startup’s developer program. And, what do you know, it’s August and they have yet another piece of news: Two new executives are joining the fledgling company’s ranks.
THALMIC LABS RAISES $14.5M TO MAKE THE MYO ARMBAND THE NEXT BIG THING IN GESTURE CONTROL
TechCrunch
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June 5, 2013
Thalmic Labs, the Waterloo-based startup working on an all new form of user input for computing devices with the MYO amrband, today announced the close of its $14.5 million Series A funding round, led by Spark Capital and Intel Capital. The round boasts a lot of others besides, including Formation 8, First Round Capital, FundersClub, and individual investors like Paul Graham, Garry Tan, Marc Benioff and more, and will be used to help spur product development of the MYO, and of other forthcoming Thalmic technologies.
Two Canadian Wearable Tech Startups Honored in PwC’s Vision to Reality Awards
MobileSyrup
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Jan. 1, 2000
By this time next year, some of us will be unlocking our front doors without keys and changing TV channels with the flick of our wrists. Behind these futuristic-sounding innovations are two Canadian startups, Bionym and Thalmic Labs, whose wearable tech recently put them on PwC’s list of top ten up-and-coming technology companies in Canada.