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Science

Linking Hardware To Wetware 195

Vikki_R. writes: "Wired has an article about grafting a microelectric circuit directly onto a human brain cell. Researchers at the University of Texas at Austin have been working on developing an interface between semiconductors and neurons. Imagine being able to give your computer a piece of your mind ..." Update: 11/25 22:54 GMT by T : Here's an earlier post linking to a different article on the same research.
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Linking Hardware To Wetware

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  • Re:No thats not it (Score:2, Informative)

    by lucius ( 189447 ) on Sunday November 25, 2001 @08:19PM (#2611476)
    Are you serious? You actually think that humans could possible build a machine that could decode thoughts realtime from brain impulses?

    At the moment it's a massively nontrivial task to tell if monkeys are looking at black or white. Do you think a computer (no matter how much people idolise the things) could tell the difference between two basic thoughts? For a start you'd have to interface to some massive fraction of the number of nerve cells, then you'd have to get all this data to a huge computer somewhere and have it analysed. And for what? The best way to find out what someone is thinking is to just ask them. There'll never be a computer that can read peoples' minds anywhere near as well as a good trial lawyer who's trained to study faces.
  • Diamond Age (Score:2, Informative)

    by tjackson ( 50499 ) on Monday November 26, 2001 @05:40AM (#2612466) Journal
    I just finished Diamond Age about 5 minutes ago. Go read it. NOW.

    The reason I say this is because in this masterpiece work by Neal Stephenson, one of the focuses of the book is on a society of 'Drummers', a group of people connected with wetware. They have nanosites circulating in their bloodstream, and they use the hosts' brain in... well... I would tell you, but it's kinda a major plot element. Go read this book.

    P.S.: I would pay large amounts of money to be able to do what mgkimsal2 [slashdot.org] says. [slashdot.org] (without the ads, of course.

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