Designed for integration with dance routines, the device can be held by a performer and used to create music by simulating the strums of a guitar or the movement of a bow across a violin. The device will perform its simulation through Bluetooth 4.0 connectivity and two sensors, an accelerometer and a gyroscope. The company hoping to produce the device, TZM Creative Lab, is raising the funds through its website, where more information about the imagined device can be found.
Which app allows its user to play air guitar?
Answer: Motus
Wireless devices are becoming more precise and feature-rich each year, and a new Lithuanian company now raising funds to create a device called Motus is proof of that progression.
Designed for integration with dance routines, the device can be held by a performer and used to create music by simulating the strums of a guitar or the movement of a bow across a violin. The device will perform its simulation through Bluetooth 4.0 connectivity and two sensors, an accelerometer and a gyroscope. The company hoping to produce the device, TZM Creative Lab, is raising the funds through its website, where more information about the imagined device can be found.
Designed for integration with dance routines, the device can be held by a performer and used to create music by simulating the strums of a guitar or the movement of a bow across a violin. The device will perform its simulation through Bluetooth 4.0 connectivity and two sensors, an accelerometer and a gyroscope. The company hoping to produce the device, TZM Creative Lab, is raising the funds through its website, where more information about the imagined device can be found.