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Implant a Chip in Your Head

vic_1066 writes "Brain chips sound pretty Orwellian, but the tech has come a long way (Soul eating registration required) in the past few years. Not that I'll be signing up anytime soon to get my head sliced open just for kicks, but if I was massively paralyzed this would be welcome news. If you get a chance, check out Cyberkinetics Inc."

11 of 204 comments (clear)

  1. What about using this for video game play? by Phoenix-kun · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I have a friend who was in a near fatal auto accident several months ago (not her fault, btw). She is now paralyzed from the chest down and has only limited control of her hands. Before the accident, she was one of the best competitive video game players that I've ever had the pleasure to know. Now, almost 6 months after the accident, she can play turn-based games OK, but does not have the fine control for the fast action FP type games. It would be so wonderful if something like this could give that ability back to her.

    --
    Phoenix
  2. External memory would be nice. by Jin+Wicked · · Score: 4, Interesting

    So far I rely on pen and paper to remember everything... I mean seriously, I have a lot of trauma in my past and the way my brain dealt with it was to just become so forgetful that I can barely remember what I did the week before.

    I'd really like some safe, secure way to "back my brain up" as it were, besides filling albums with photos to job my memory.

    --
    My Webcomic: Asylum on 5th Street
    1. Re:External memory would be nice. by Alric · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I recently had a long discussion on this very topic. The eventual conclusion was that if we can backup the brain, then we should be able to restore it also. So, we will almost be able to treat life like a video game, with save-points, especially if our robot bodies come soon.

      Scenario>>
      ME: Hmm, I wonder what it feels like to jump off of a cliff.

      Paramedics arrive at the scene of the gruesome death.

      Medic1: Oy, that's one mangled robot carcass.
      Medic2: What's that clutched in his strong, metal robot hand? A suicide note?
      Medic1: It says, "Please revert to 4/12/04 Backup at IP:143.233.211.2.1.1.0.3".
      >>

      Oh what a wonderful world it will be.

    2. Re:External memory would be nice. by Noofus · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Only problem with this is that now you dont have the memory of the experience so you wouldnt know what it was like. However you probabl;y do that the "thought pattern" in your mind that would lead you to ask this question, and thus repeat your actions. :)

  3. Orwellian? by meringuoid · · Score: 5, Interesting
    ... Which of Orwell's works do we have in mind here? Down and Out in Paris and London, perhaps? Animal Farm? I can't remember brain chips anywhere in Orwell.

    Perhaps it was 1984? But as I remember it, the Party had never been able to develop a technique to discover what another human being was thinking. The inside of the human mind remained untouchable; it was the last sanctuary from their totalitarianism. Hence their reliance on propaganda and torture as cruder methods of mind control...

    --
    Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
  4. Re:Add that to your resume by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I would get a chip, in fact, I hope and pray I can get one before I die. I'm still quite young, so I might see the day.

    The killer application will, as always, be sex and games. Who wouldn't want to experience fully immersive games and "recreational" programs so real you'd have to build some sort of system into it distinguish it from "reality". And mimicing reality is only the beginning, it's the unreal possibilities I want to experience in full lucidity with all my senses.

    One problem is, would you dare be an early adaptor? What if when Version 2.0 of said brain interface comes around you can't upgrade because the damage is done to the wetware. As new, better, versions would be installed in young people, we'd label older persons with their now defunct chips obsolete. Perhaps it's just an extension of age discrimination and not much worse than what we have now, still, it makes one think.

  5. Slight downside (and opportunity) by borkus · · Score: 2, Interesting
    If you think keeping a fresh ear lobe piercing clean is tough, imagine keeping a skull piercing clean.

    ...the signals from the chip are carried out of the body by wires coming through the skull. When the system is to be used, a cable will be connected to the wires. ... The opening in the skin is permanent and poses a risk of infection...
    Infections were rare and treatable, Dr. Mukand said, and the incidence should be even lower in people, who understand the risk...One uncertainty is whether the implants will move around over time or cause scarring. Either could lead to loss of the neuron signal.
    Of course, I wonder if someone is working on a socket to which bone and skin will graft. If you can get tissue to seal around the housing for the wires, it would make it even easier for people with the implant to live normally.
  6. Carpal tunnel be gone! by herrlich_98 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    How many words per minute could I type if I didn't actually have to move my fingers?

    To say nothing of having an imbeded PDA in my head reminding me of appointments I'm missing.

    What I *really* want is image recognition tied into my vision so I can instantly remember the name anyone I've ever seen before.

  7. Nobody remebers 'seeing' this in wired? by Louis+A.+J. · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Wired 10.09: Vision Quest

    "A half century of artificial-sight research has succeeded. And now this blind man can see."
    The patient lost his sight to accidents. By inserting brain implants and connecting them to cameras he can 'see' well enough to drive again. The dataflow direction is reversed but the implementation is the same.

  8. Time will tell by Amtiskaw · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This technology is interesting, but as long as it is reliant on sticking spiked electrodes into your brain to reach neurons, it's not going to be that useful. If/when nano-tech develops to the point where it can be used to effectively interface with large volumes of neurons, with minimal intrusion into the physical brain, then we might see some cool/frightening stuff happening.

  9. Hmm. by Run4yourlives · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Not to argue your entire post, but I would like to point out some things you said in the following paragraph, because I think that although you've read the Bible and are being (rightly) critical, you've missed the point of the verse.

    As far as I know, so far noone's asking you to accept some particular government to get a simple medical implant.

    Ah if life were that simple! You're right, nobody explicitly does such things, but implicitly, the consent is given. At the risk of ending this thread (!) nobody voted for hitler to kill 6 million jews either, yet the implicit consent was given by society. The verse warns that it's under this environment that the mark is given.

    Noone asked that you change religions to get any other surgery, you know.

    Again, not explicitly. But what if the path society is following starts to contradict your religion? It may mean nothing to you or me to participate in a capitalist "winner take all" society, but what does it mean to someone that feels that this isn't the right path? One could always move, but remember that the in Revalation the government is global.

    And noone has been so far asked to get a peg-leg to be allowed to conduct business, so, you know, I doubt they'll be required to get an implant against paralysis either.

    Of course not, but try living without a credit card... or how about a bank account... these are enormous amounts of control in the hands of the very few.

    The sky isn't falling, but until we get our act together, technology will give plenty to us, all the while taking plenty away.