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Behind Elon Musk’s Neuralink, the Company Developing Brain-Machine Interfaces
All About Circuits ^
| 07 20 2020
| Adrian Gibbons
Posted on 07/20/2020 10:16:55 PM PDT by yesthatjallen
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To: yesthatjallen
Music? How about downloading 4 years of college learning in a minute or two.
Reading and attending lectures is such a slow and old fashioned way to learn.
21
posted on
07/21/2020 4:45:09 AM PDT
by
aquila48
(Do not let them make you care! Guilting you is how they control you.)
To: Ex gun maker.
The Droud implant of Laurence van Cott Niven, depicted as a drug-free perpetual high encompassing all human vices.
To: Ex gun maker.
Micro-second symmetric pulses trigger neuron firing without resulting in substantial ion migration. There is potential to train neuron clusters to produce a sustained patterned firing.
To: Ozark Tom
What I do know for certain is that NO ONE is getting near me with anything remotely resembling this garbage!
2A to resist tyranny, and I cannot think of anything more tyrannical than Gov. Org. directly taking control/access to our minds.
24
posted on
07/21/2020 10:53:47 AM PDT
by
Ex gun maker.
(Unconstitutional "Law" is void from inception.....)
To: aquila48
Dollhouse for a personality transplant with memories plus skills.
To: roadcat
Think bigger!
Think even bigger.
No need to watch your steps when your brain and body can be contained inside an (robotic) exoskeleton that can do the walking for you, while the AI inside that exoskeleton communicates directly into your brain.
In fact, why even bother with the human body when your brain can be extracted and then becomes part of the exoskeleton with AI? When people die, their brains might be kept alive and could live on inside an exoskeleton. Most functions and joys that the human body 'performs' would be gone, but perhaps sometime in the future, somebody could create and 'android' (no, not the phone OS) that can feel like a human.
26
posted on
08/25/2020 8:05:32 PM PDT
by
adorno
To: adorno
When people die, their brains might be kept alive and could live on inside an exoskeleton. Think even bigger. There was a Star Trek episode where they encountered aliens who consisted of brains encapsulated in globes. No bodies. The brains could control and explore the environment outside of the brain. No need to put a brain in an exoskeleton at all.
27
posted on
08/25/2020 9:41:32 PM PDT
by
roadcat
To: roadcat
No need to put a brain in an exoskeleton at all.
Yet, even in your example, the brains were 'encapsulated in globes', sort of an exoskeleton housing the brain. The globes must've served as the means of movement, otherwise, they'd be like trees sitting in just one place exploring only their immediate surroundings.
28
posted on
08/26/2020 5:25:38 AM PDT
by
adorno
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