- Nanoleaf has launched a new lighting strip that synchronizes with your instructor
- This could provide an immersive boost to Mac players
- Apple also patented a magic mouse with haptic comments
Things have looked for Mac players in recent years, Apple launching increasingly powerful and AAA equipment games from the company’s computers. Now there are some new reasons why Mac game could become a more immersive touch.
The first is that Nanoleaf has just launched the PC Screen Mirror Lightstrip, which is a lighting strip for mac and PC office monitors that offers rainbow effects for immersive experience during the game, listening to music or the search for television shows and films.
The band connects to your computer via USB-C and must be twinned using the nanoleaf desktop application. Once this is done, its lights can actively correspond to what is happening on your screen, offering a backlight effect that extends the colors to the screen to your environment.
Nanoleaf Lightstrip costs $ 49.99 and can be pre -ordered on the company’s website. He will start to ship at the end of March.
The Apple patent points to a haptic magic game mouse
Although Nanoleaf’s latest product is available on order now, there is another idea that could give a boost to Mac players who is a little more experimental, and it comes in the form of a freshly discovered patent (via the apple obviously).
The patent describes how a future magic mouse could be integrated with haptic sensors that imitate the effects of the action on the screen. For example, this could allow you to feel the texture of moving into the sand or sliding on the ice, offering a much more immersive game experience.
Currently, Apple’s magic mouse is poorly suited to games because of its slippery upper surface, its non -ergonomic shape and its lack of customizable pimples. Although the ideas discussed in the patent can help make it more viable for the game, it will take a more varied overhaul before becoming the pointer of players’ choice. That said, the idea of an anchored mouse with haptic sensors could also apply to creative and productivity tasks, so there is a certain degree of flexibility here.
Being a patent, we do not know when – or if – it will never materialize. But it is interesting to imagine how it could benefit Mac players and productivity lovers.




