"The openEEG project[42] has developed several open hardware EEG devices while the OpenBCI project[43] plans to release an open hardware device in 2014."
Anybody have some ideas on what this page should say?
I updated the table with what I believe is the correct OpenBCI ship date (maybe @biomurph or @conor could confirm), and updated the paragraph you mention by breaking it apart and adding some info to the section about the OpenBCI. I also added a paragraph to the Technology section mentioning that the OpenBCI can do EEG, EMG, *and* EKG.
I'm a beginner to brain tech, and I was looking around for a good EEG headset. Could you tell me what are the pros and cons of an OpenBCI headset vs. and Imec headset, or vs. building one myself via plans on OpenEEG?
@BucketOfFish , I merged your question into this existing thread.
Building an OpenEEG is a hard way to go. The Olimex unit is inexpensive and a good alternative until the Ganglion arrives. Take a close look at the Muse, there is a lot of support for it on various apps and the neuromore system. The Imec stuff is not really consumer grade, more like medical / research, so very expensive.
Comments
I updated the table with what I believe is the correct OpenBCI ship date (maybe @biomurph or @conor could confirm), and updated the paragraph you mention by breaking it apart and adding some info to the section about the OpenBCI. I also added a paragraph to the Technology section mentioning that the OpenBCI can do EEG, EMG, *and* EKG.
P.S. I wrote the OpenBCI Wikipedia page — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenBCI — and feedback is welcome. It probably could use updating by now…
Building an OpenEEG is a hard way to go. The Olimex unit is inexpensive and a good alternative until the Ganglion arrives. Take a close look at the Muse, there is a lot of support for it on various apps and the neuromore system. The Imec stuff is not really consumer grade, more like medical / research, so very expensive.
William