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OT: Hardware-to-Organism Interfaces (h2oi)
Could use some ideas on the following:
1) What kinds of h2oi might be useful? Example: electronic to nerve cells 2) What practical uses could be found? Example: improved artificial limbs Prefer ideas that are based in reality (no X-men, please) and that would likely be acceptable to people (no Borg, please). But doesn't need to be currently "do-able." TIA |
Re: OT: Hardware-to-Organism Interfaces (h2oi)
obviously, interfaces for operating all sorts of complex machinery. Large ammounts of effort go into making effective manual interfaces for things like attack helocopters, jet fighters, and main battle tanks. if there were direct mind-machine interfaces, they would become much more effective.
I am sure that new vistas would also open up for computer operating systems and interfaces, and related technologies. If you would like something less far-out, then artificial limbs are probably the leading example. also, things like chemical dispensors that can be implanted and will regulate the distribution of drugs or enzimes that the body needs. an example of this, is a recent development in the treatment of diabeties. insulin producing cells have been developed that can be injected into the blood stream, and produce regulated ammounts of insulin, feeding off the nutrients in the blood of the subject. problem is, white blood cells tend to kill them off. so they are encased in a microscopic 'cage' (think wiffle-ball) which has openings large enough for nutrients to be absorbed and insulin to pass, but small enough to block white blood cells. |
Re: OT: Hardware-to-Organism Interfaces (h2oi)
This recent pop sci article on the subject blew me away. I think we are very close to practical applications. It's life altering stuff. I think it's especially cool the way the brain can "remap" itself and get to the point where it treats the machine parts as part of the body. Very cool.
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Re: OT: Hardware-to-Organism Interfaces (h2oi)
Quote:
bob: 'oops.' bill: 'what's the sergeant doing now? thirty?' fred: 'yeah, i gotta get me some cybernetic upgrades' 30 minutes later, commander's office: 'did you have to wreck the jeep?!' yeah, there could be a few problems. and this looks like it could really do the sci-fi horror and let the government actually read and maybe control your thoughts. tinfoil helmet, anyone? http://forum.shrapnelgames.com/images/icons/shock.gif qoute from that page: 'DARPA is famous for funding futuristic technology of all sorts, from the precursor to the Internet to the ill-fated terrorist futures market, which was attacked by Congress Last summer.' WHAT?? [ February 05, 2004, 21:32: Message edited by: narf poit chez BOOM ] |
Re: OT: Hardware-to-Organism Interfaces (h2oi)
you dont remember the terrorism futures market? some cockeyed idea that abstract chaos-theory organic entities like the stock market are better predictors of economic trends than professional economists are. therefore, setting up a futures market on the likelyhood of terrorist activity will be a better indicator than professional inteligence analyists.
riiiiight. |
Re: OT: Hardware-to-Organism Interfaces (h2oi)
Thanks for the feedback so far. For the record, "mind-reading" interfaces are total fantasy (at least at this point). I'm looking for ideas that might reasonably be implemented in 10 years or so.
Another example: Researchers have already steered cockroaches and rats using brain implants. So, how about remote-controlled animals (dogs, pigeons, rats) equipped with cameras? Another example: Monitoring actual cells exposed to the environment, as detectors for harmful agents. Another example (that is already in use): cochlear implants to restore hearing |
Re: OT: Hardware-to-Organism Interfaces (h2oi)
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Re: OT: Hardware-to-Organism Interfaces (h2oi)
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Re: OT: Hardware-to-Organism Interfaces (h2oi)
I remember a few years back, Russian inteligence declasified documents on a cyber cat they had built, for survailance. they could steer through implants in the poor thing, record video and audio (god knows where they put the sensors) and it had an antenna burried under its skin. poor thing cost MILLIONS.
honest to god, i read this in the news - and you can probably dredge it up on the web. according to the report the day they were going to field test it, they let it out of their van and watched in horror as it was run over by a car. in unrelated news, there is also some fierce competition between companies developing ocular implants to restore sight to the blind. some of them tap directly into the occular nerve, and the one that has gotten the most press coverage is able to deliver a 100 pixel (10x10 field of dots) display, enough to enable the subject to destinguish shapes, or read very large block lettering. Artificial Muscle is a big thing, not only for medicine but for robotics and small motors. nanotubes are all the rage right now, but I saw one interesting report a few months back, about using very fine and very poreous strands of platinum that can contract by huge ammounts, because of all the holes and pores. |
Re: OT: Hardware-to-Organism Interfaces (h2oi)
wow, i was WAY off. first, it was ours and not theres. second, we couldnt steer it - which was part of the problem. third, no video, just audio.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/cbbcnews/hi/an...00/1638924.stm They say your memory is the second thing to go. Heck if I can remember what the first thing was, but I guess its not as necessary as I must have thought, back when I had it. |
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