The human brain is unimaginably complex and powerful. In fact, no computer that mankind has built thus far has even come close. That's why scientists have worked tirelessly to create cyborg computers, ...
If you saw the world through Steve Mann’s eyes -- actually, through the glasses attached to his wearable computer -- you’d always have a computer display floating in your field of vision. As you ...
Forget fitness trackers — the next step in the “quantified self” movement is going cyborg. American biohacker Tim Cannon has invented a device implanted under the skin that tracks and transmits vital ...
An "insect-computer hybrid" has been developed by scientists, allowing them to take control of living insects by electronically stimulating their nervous system. Researchers from Singapore's Nanyang ...
In an amazing but slightly weird world first, scientists have formed a feedback loop between common, baking and brewing yeast, and a computer. The computer can trigger the yeast to produce a protein, ...
Cyborg insects have been scuttling and buzzing around for years, but now, researchers from the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) have scaled the idea up to a turtle. With ...
For more than seven years and three months, 36-year-old Nathan Copeland has lived with a brain-computer interface, which almost makes him a cybernetic being. According to WIRED, Cooper holds the ...
Brain chips mean we are struggling to distinguish our own thoughts from ideas implanted by advertisers. Self-driving cars restrict old-school human drivers to special recreation parks. And the optimal ...
Someday humans and computers will meld together to create cyborgs. But instead of waiting for it, Martin Magnusson, a Swedish researcher and entrepreneur, has taken the first step and created a ...
Been a while since we’ve seen a good wearable computing rig, and I have to say, Martin Magnusson of Sweden manages pulls it off while still looking extremely badass and without shame for what others ...
In an amazing but slightly weird world first, scientists have formed a feedback loop between common, baking and brewing yeast, and a computer. The computer can trigger the yeast to produce a protein, ...
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