New Product Discoveries — Tactigon ONE and Seeed Odyssey

This installment of New Product Discoveries takes a look at the Tactigon ONE from Next Industries, along with the Odyssey series of x86 single board computers from Seeed.

The Tactigon is a Next Industries brand for their wearable Arduino-compatible wireless motion sensor products designed as a programmable wearable to enable gesture control for robots, PC games, VR/AR, computers, 3D printers, drones, apps, and more. The Tactigon ONE is the core of Tactigon Skin, a finished gesture controller, and is programmable and compatible with Arduino IDE.

Featuring a 9 DOF IMU, temperature and pressure sensors, BLE, and Li-Ion battery support, the Tactigon ONE is ideal for implementing motion control into any application.

The Odyssey x86 SBCs allow users to build Edge Computing applications with ease. It is based on the Intel Celeron J4105 Quad-Core 1.5GHz CPU that offers speed bursts up to 2.5GHz. It includes all the powerful features of a Mini PC such as 8GB LPDDR4 RAM, 64GB eMMC Storage (optional), onboard Wi-Fi/BLE, Dual Gigabyte Ethernet Ports, Audio Input and Output, USB Ports, HDMI, SATA Connectors, and PCIe.

Connect a mouse, keyboard, and monitor to the Odyssey X86J4105 and you will have a powerful Desktop Mini PC that can run Windows and Linux OS, plus with eMMC versions Windows 10 Enterprise Edition is pre-installed!

This is just a brief overview of the products featured, so be sure to check out both of these suppliers and the individual products for more information with the links provided.

About this author

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Nate Larson is a Technical Content Developer that has been with DigiKey since 2008. He earned his Associate of Applied Science degree in Electronics Technology & Automated Systems from Northland Community & Technical College through the DigiKey scholarship program. Nate’s current role is assisting in the creation of unique technical projects, documenting the process and ultimately participating in the production of video media coverage for the projects. In his spare time Nate lives the DIY maker ethos, engaging in projects consisting of carpentry and woodworking, 3D printing, coding, and tinkering with anything electronic.

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