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OCZ Prepares Neural Impulse Actuator for Shipping

An anonymous reader writes "Technology review site Overclock3D has received word that OCZ Technology is putting their neural impulse actuator (NIA) into mass production for shipping next week. The device, aimed at gamers, works by reading biopotentials. 'These include activities of the brain, the autonomous nervous system and muscles — all of which are captured using embrace sensors located on the NIA's headband, amplified and sent to the PC via USB 2.0.' Users of the NIA will be able to control their in-game movements using only the power of mind. The device is priced at around $600USD"

13 of 193 comments (clear)

  1. Re:April Fools!? by DMUTPeregrine · · Score: 5, Informative

    Not necessarily. There have been devices like this for paralyzed people for years. The big innovation would be making it small and cheap enough to sell, which they say they have done.
    A more detailed review might help.

    --
    Not a sentence!
  2. This would be great, by gijoel · · Score: 5, Funny

    If I didn't have to think in Russian.

  3. non-gaming application by Corpuscavernosa · · Score: 5, Funny

    The online porn experience would be greatly simplified.

    --
    We figured out a long time ago that it's easier to elect seven judges than to elect 132 legislators.
  4. Correction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    The article says the device will cost an estimated $300, not $600.

  5. Uses for this technology by whistlingtony · · Score: 5, Interesting

    No No No.... "reaction times can be cut by anything up to 60%" I don't care about reaction times. I care about my wrists. Frag gaming, just let me move my mouse for more than an hour without painful twinges and numbness.

    Also, these idiots are missing a revolution here. I believe that something like this device coupled with HUD glasses will be a revolution as large as the mouse and GUI were back in the day.

    Right now I am coupled to my computer. It got better when I got a laptop. Now my computer comes with me. Still though, I have to take it out, sit down, and while I'm using my computer I'm stuck staring at a screen and using a keyboard/mouse. The "Mobile" in mobile computing only counts when you're not using your computer.

    Imagine if you didn't even have to take out your computer.

    Leave your computer in your bookbag or pocket. Put on your display glasses so you can see your "screen" hovering in your view. Use a headband (perhaps hidden in your hat) to control the interface (and perhaps one day type). Use speech recognition to type and control.

    No more hands. No more being chained to your computer. This frees us as much as the mouse/gui freed us, and will pave the way to opportunities I can't even imagine....

    And these idiots are touting it as a gaming gimmick. Not even one mention of UI possibilities. Sigh.

    I want my Shadowrun Comlink. The future is staring at us and people aren't even paying attention.

    -Tony

    1. Re:Uses for this technology by QuantumG · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Hey, it's you who is failing the imagination test.

      "Mobile computing" is currently about doing the stuff you do on a desktop computer while you are not sitting at a desk. This even includes "making calls", even if you more often than not use your land line instead of something like Skype when you are at your desk.

      In the future (the magical super future) the computers that are sewn into your clothes will not be helping you check your email.. they are will be helping you do all those things that just don't make any sense if you're not on the move:

          * Helping you avoid traffic jams
          * Telling you when the next bus/train/rocket is leaving on your regular route so you know to walk faster
          * Posting your position to Facebook - or whatever takes its place
          * Keeping track of where your friends are - cause kids in the future will care more about being able to find their friends than who can see where they are.
          * Enabling you to search the local environment for businesses, single women, whatever.
          * Interacting with all the new network enabled devices that haven't been invented yet.. and don't be surprised if you can't even get a coke from a vending machine if you don't have sufficient network presence.

      and so on and so on.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
  6. My friend by Smordnys+s'regrepsA · · Score: 5, Interesting

    My friend did his thesis on using (basically) this system to help invalids participate in the world, about 10 years ago. According to him, at first everyone can raise or lower all their brain waves at once, and within a month can raise or lower a specific wave. At first for it to be accurate, you need to have the system read muscle movement for facial tics, but gradually you can phase out this input as the patient becomes more adept at controlling his mental state. The hardest part of writing his thesis was getting time with the equipment.

    Forget about games, this being mass-produced is a great step towards turning the handicapped into the handicapable .

    Also, look for the New Agers gobbling this stuff up for their meditation ceremonies.

    --
    Just -1, Troll talking to another.
  7. Not April fools... by WebCowboy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ...it's real, and it's a very old idea. Atari created a very similar device 25 years ago. It was crude by today's standards (you very nearly had to move your eyebrows for it to register movement) but it did work. Atari had working prototypes at a CES in the early 1980s--people could play pong and breakout with the "mindlink". It was a crude form of the very same technology used here, though it was much less sensitive and required a bit of muscle movement for it to pick up neural impulses. The technology was developed for myoelectric prosthetic limbs and has matured greatly since those days.

    Atari's MindLink controller was never released to production though...testers often experienced tension headaches after using the device for extended sessions and it was not very precise. Beyond pong and breakout and other simple games it was not very effective because users had trouble coping with more than simple linear control. Also, furhter refinement of the product was abandoned as this was around the time of the Tramiel takeover (and Tramiel was known not to ever be enthusiastic about the potential of home video game consoles vs. low cost home computers) and the big console industry shakeout made for a lot of vapourware from all industry players.

    Certainly with increased processing power and better sensor technology in the past 25 years there could be much more potential in such a device, especially for those who have physical disabilities that prevent them from effectively using keyboards and mice. This isn't April fools or even a new idea, and it employs passive sensors (they do not transmit neural impulses--only detect the ones you generate) so a "blue screen of death" won't really kill you, and if you get a good fragging it won't fry your brain (the feedback is only visual--what is on the screen).

  8. Re:April Fools!? by khellendros1984 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I actually saw something like this at CES '07. It was able to tell the difference between "relax" and "concentrate", for instance. They had it hooked up as a Half-Life 2 modification. If you concentrated, the things under the cursor would start to explode. Relax, and they would start floating around your head. It was pretty cool to watch, but it's not something that would be useful for playing most fast-paced games.

    --
    It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
  9. competitor by Danny+Rathjens · · Score: 5, Informative

    Looks like they may be beating http://www.emotiv.com/ 's "EPOC Neuroheadset" to market by several months. The claim for the EPOC was that it would be available for the holidays at the end of 2008. Interesting that they are also planning to sell for the same $300 price as this OCZ one.

  10. Re:April Fools!? by PopeRatzo · · Score: 4, Funny

    Seriously. I just can't imagine that this could possibly work better than keyboard/mouse setup.
    Next thing, they're gonna tell us you'll be able to play video games by waving a little stick at the screen.
    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  11. This is so real. by BluFusion · · Score: 4, Informative

    ... WOW.
    ... WOW.

    It is real and the technology exists. I have had past PERSONAL experience with computer control via neural feedback.

    --side story to explain: I have ADD and aspergers. When I was about 8 (I think) I saw for some time a particular specialist and one of the activities I did was to be hooked up (with electrodes on my head) to a computer and navigate a 2D map with a little dot.

    Not quite the level of control that you'd need however I can tell you with practice it gets easier.

    This is amazing stuff. I'm so getting one.

  12. Power of the mind? by reboot246 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Users of the NIA will be able to control their in-game movements using only the power of mind.
    'Tis a shame some won't be able to play. :)