Seeking opinions re aptly named Neuralink YT video: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=lA77zsJ31nA At what point do you get one of these? I am not an expert consultant but having to get a hole drilled in your head is what some would call a “barrier to entry.”
Imagine the possibilities for someone who's paralyzed and disabled to control devices themselves without anyone's help.
Eventually the tech will become widespread and their will be more data for them to write decoders for our brains so to speak. Possibilities are endless really. For example the ability to type as fast as we can think instead of our typing speed. Or the ability to record our dreams etc
Are you ready to sign up, CK brother?
There isn't enough data available for me to make that decision yet. But yes, I would if after like a decade or 2 it can do the following. It's simplified to be as simple as a lasik, there are enough decoders so to the speak to perform complex tasks instead of just simple tasks that it will be able to do for the next few years.
Better hope it works better than tesla or SpaceX since its connected to your brain.
I love you username and I’m curious whether there’s a complaint re SpaceX outside of missing timelines... Seems like you can ride that whole landing a rocket thing forever.
Many of the rockets we land get scraped. We have had a good track record over the last 3-4 years with creating massive unplanned explosions every year or so. Lots of small mishaps every month or so that dont get reported but shouldn't have happen and "generally" get lucky they don't result in people being maimed or killed.
Would drilling a hole in your skull compromise its structural integrity? Seems like it may become more prone to fracture
Naw. Fracturing your skull isn’t the issue. It’s the g force shock your gray matter takes before your skull fractures that is.
Musk is master in pumping up crazy ideas that never come through Autonomous Tesla, hyperloop etc
What do you mean by “utilized properly,” and why isn’t technology that interfaces with the brain the real innovation? That feels like the revolutionary piece... not changes to surgery practices. (Genuinely interested)