
World-First Biocomputing Platform Hits the Market (ieee.org) 20
An anonymous reader quotes a report from IEEE Spectrum: In a development straight out of science fiction, Australian startup Cortical Labs has released what it calls the world's first code-deployable biological computer. The CL1, which debuted in March, fuses human brain cells on a silicon chip to process information via sub-millisecond electrical feedback loops. Designed as a tool for neuroscience and biotech research, the CL1 offers a new way to study how brain cells process and react to stimuli. Unlike conventional silicon-based systems, the hybrid platform uses live human neurons capable of adapting, learning, and responding to external inputs in real time. "On one view, [the CL1] could be regarded as the first commercially available biomimetic computer, the ultimate in neuromorphic computing that uses real neurons," says theoretical neuroscientist Karl Friston of University College London. "However, the real gift of this technology is not to computer science. Rather, it's an enabling technology that allows scientists to perform experiments on a little synthetic brain."
The first 115 units will begin shipping this summer at $35,000 each, or $20,000 when purchased in 30-unit server racks. Cortical Labs also offers a cloud-based "wetware-as-a-service" at $300 weekly per unit, unlocking remote access to its in-house cell cultures. Each CL1 contains 800,000 lab-grown human neurons, reprogrammed from the skin or blood samples of real adult donors. The cells remain viable for up to six months, fed by a life-support system that supplies nutrients, controls temperature, filters waste, and maintains fluid balance. Meanwhile, the neurons are firing and interpreting signals, adapting from each interaction.
The CL1's compact energy and hardware footprint could make it attractive for extended experiments. A rack of CL1 units consumes 850-1,000 watts, notably lower than the tens of kilowatts required by a data center setup running AI workloads. "Brain cells generate small electrical pulses to communicate to a broader network," says Cortical Labs Chief Scientific Officer Brett Kagan. "We can do something similar by inputting small electrical pulses representing bits of information, and then reading their responses. The CL1 does this in real time using simple code abstracted through multiple interacting layers of firmware and hardware. Sub-millisecond loops read information, act on it, and write new information into the cell culture." The company sees CL1 as foundational for testing neuropsychiatric treatments, leveraging living cells to explore genetic and functional differences. "It allows people to study the effects of stimulation, drugs and synthetic lesions on how neuronal circuits learn and respond in a closed-loop setup, when the neuronal network is in reciprocal exchange with some simulated world," says theoretical neuroscientist Karl Friston of University College London. "In short, experimentalists now have at hand a little 'brain in a vat,' something philosophers have been dreaming about for decades."
The first 115 units will begin shipping this summer at $35,000 each, or $20,000 when purchased in 30-unit server racks. Cortical Labs also offers a cloud-based "wetware-as-a-service" at $300 weekly per unit, unlocking remote access to its in-house cell cultures. Each CL1 contains 800,000 lab-grown human neurons, reprogrammed from the skin or blood samples of real adult donors. The cells remain viable for up to six months, fed by a life-support system that supplies nutrients, controls temperature, filters waste, and maintains fluid balance. Meanwhile, the neurons are firing and interpreting signals, adapting from each interaction.
The CL1's compact energy and hardware footprint could make it attractive for extended experiments. A rack of CL1 units consumes 850-1,000 watts, notably lower than the tens of kilowatts required by a data center setup running AI workloads. "Brain cells generate small electrical pulses to communicate to a broader network," says Cortical Labs Chief Scientific Officer Brett Kagan. "We can do something similar by inputting small electrical pulses representing bits of information, and then reading their responses. The CL1 does this in real time using simple code abstracted through multiple interacting layers of firmware and hardware. Sub-millisecond loops read information, act on it, and write new information into the cell culture." The company sees CL1 as foundational for testing neuropsychiatric treatments, leveraging living cells to explore genetic and functional differences. "It allows people to study the effects of stimulation, drugs and synthetic lesions on how neuronal circuits learn and respond in a closed-loop setup, when the neuronal network is in reciprocal exchange with some simulated world," says theoretical neuroscientist Karl Friston of University College London. "In short, experimentalists now have at hand a little 'brain in a vat,' something philosophers have been dreaming about for decades."
Will it trip if we feed it LSD? (Score:3)
Now that would be a heck of an experiment!
Where do the brain cells come from? (Score:5, Interesting)
Are they harvesting them from humans?
Re: (Score:2)
The story says "800k lab-grown" right in the summary.
So probably not.
Re: (Score:2)
The story says "800k lab-grown" right in the summary.
So probably not.
(AI Systems Engineer) "Wait, we can grow the damn thing? For forks sake Sheldon, why the hell are we buying all this nVidia shit.."
Re: (Score:1)
Are they harvesting them from humans?
If they are, I'd like to give them a piece of my mind.
What happens when the cells die? (Score:4, Insightful)
Each CL1 contains 800,000 lab-grown human neurons, reprogrammed from the skin or blood samples of real adult donors. The cells remain viable for up to six months, fed by a life-support system that supplies nutrients, controls temperature, filters waste, and maintains fluid balance.
The cells last for (up to) six months, and then what? It sounds like growing the cells is a fairly expensive part of the process ("While it cost us quite a bit to make 100,000 neurons...", and I can't find any mention of what the options are. I guess if you have to ask, the "wetware-as-a-service" option is for you.
Re: (Score:2)
and then what?
You shave, drill, scoop, dump and go on with your "research".
Re: (Score:2)
Probably something like a printer ink scenario, but possibly even more expensive, and with a limited shelf life.
It may be possible to get cheap refill kits from Aliexpress that work well apart from some extraneous "FREE XINJIANG" output.
Obligatory (Score:3)
Robot: What is my purpose?
Rick: You pass butter.
Robot: Oh my God.
Rick: Yeah, welcome to the club, pal
So many questions (Score:2)
with disturbing implications. For one, a shelf life of "up to" six months, is that at idle, or under full load?
Is there any sentience going on?
Is this a really elaborate April Fools joke?
How fast are these wetware chips? Are we talking sub-Ghz speed or what?
Is each neuron equal to a CPU core?
What is the purpose/function of this device?
The list goes on, but I am reminded of a line, "I have no mouth and I must scream."
Re: (Score:2)
My guess is that this isn't aimed at computation, so much, as analysis of neuron function.
So no sentience, under any normal definition. And speed is nearly irrelevant.
Welcome to our new silicon-brain overlords! (Score:2)
They will take humanity beyond the fragile flesh bags and bones that we are now. Then transport us to the stars in new ships that don't need all the extra life support such flesh bags & bones need. After all, our new overlords will be minds made up of pure circuits and neurons, controlling whatever mechanical body is needed. We shall thrive as trillions of a new homo-superior species! All life's mysteries will be revealed when we no longer have flesh
Undecided (Score:2)
Matt Ferrell did a video [youtu.be] about this development last week for anyone interested.
The next big important question (Score:2)
How long until we can play Doom on it?
We are... (Score:1)