Three years ago we wrote about an EEG brain-computer interface that was going to be available to consumers. Well, it turns out, there’s been a slight delay and g.tec Guger Technologies from Graz, Austria has only just launched a marketing campaign for its technology. The intendiX system supposedly uses visually evoked EEG potentials to detect which on-screen option a user wants to select. The EEG triggers can be letters, words, actions, or just about anything that can be programmed into a computer.
Here’s a mysterious ad that g.tec put out to launch intendiX:
Here’s a video of a person typing using the G-Tec:
Product page: intendiX …
Flashback: The First Commercially Available Brain Computer Interface…
(hat tip: Engadget)