Apple, Tech and brain implant
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Elon Musk’s Neuralink Envisions a Future Without Smartphones as Brain Chips Take Center StageIn the future, there will be no phones, just Neuralinks,” tweeted Elon Musk yesterday on X, evoking a blast of wonder and skepticism. No hyperbole but a glimpse of Neuralink’s vision as his neurotechnology business.
Apple has reportedly developed a new standard with Synchron, a startup that develops stent-like devices for the brain.
Inbrain's CEO says the company will never use its brain implants for biohacking or giving humans "superpowers" — unlike Elon Musk.
Apple’s new brain-to-computer protocol in Switch Control enables iOS, iPadOS, and visionOS devices to support hands-free, thought-based interaction.
The human brain, often hailed as nature’s most powerful computer, is surprisingly slow when it comes to handling information. While our senses gather a mountain of data every second, our actual thoughts crawl along at a far slower pace.
University of California, Davis researchers have developed a brain-computer interface (BCI) that enables computer cursor control and clicking, using neural signals from the speech motor cortex. One participant with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) used the interface for daily life activities,
A neuroscience breakthrough has been achieved using AI to identify neuron cell types from the brain activity recordings of mice and monkeys with high accuracy.
Health gadgets and medical devices that track brainwaves—and the companies that make them—are at the core of a next-level debate over privacy protections.
Brad Smith is the third person in the world to get a brain chip implant with Elon Musk's Neuralink, and the first nonverbal ALS patient to do so.