- Nanoleof has launched a new lighting strip that is synchronized with its monitor
- Could provide an immersive impulse to Mac players
- Apple has also patented a magical mouse with haptic comments
Things have been improving for Mac players in recent years, with Apple launching increasingly powerful hardware and AAA games that reach the company’s computers in increasing numbers. Now, there are some new reasons that Mac Gaming could be making a more immersive touch.
The first is that Nanoleaf has just released the light screen screen, which is a lighting strip for MAC and PC desktop monitors that provides iris arc effects for an immersive experience while games, listen to music or watching television and movies programs.
The strip connects to your computer through USB-C and should be paired with the Nanolef desktop application. Once this is done, your lights can actively match what is happening on your screen, providing a backlight effect that extends the colors on the screen to your surroundings.
Nanolef Lightstrip costs $ 49.99 and can be pre-order from the company’s website. It will begin to send at the end of March.
Apple’s patent points to a magical haptic games
While Nanoleof’s last product is available to order now, there is another idea that could give Mac players a slightly more experimental impulse, and comes in the form of a newly discovered patent (through the apple evidently).
The patent describes how a future magical mouse could be integrated with haptic sensors that mimic the effects of the on -screen action. For example, I could allow you to feel the texture of moving through the sand or slide on the ice, providing a much more immersive game experience.
At this time, Apple’s magic mouse is not very suitable for games due to its upper surface, synergonomic form and lack of customizable buttons. While the ideas discussed in the patent can help make it more viable for games, you will need a broader review before it becomes the players’ pointer of choice. That said, the idea of an integrated mouse with haptic sensors could also be applied to creative and productivity tasks, so there is a degree of flexibility here.
Being a patent, we do not know when, or if, this will ever become. But it is interesting to imagine how Mac players could benefit from productivity lovers.