NSF Funds Mind-machine Interface Center 60
An anonymous reader writes "The National Science Foundation today announced an $18.5 million grant to establish an Engineering Research Center for Sensorimotor Neural Engineering based at the University of Washington. 'The center will work on robotic devices that interact with, assist and understand the nervous system,' said director Yoky Matsuoka. 'It will combine advances in robotics, neuroscience, electromechanical devices and computer science to restore or augment the body's ability for sensation and movement.' Steve Austin, anyone?"
Mind/Machine Interface (Score:2, Funny)
Prerequisite: Doctrine: Air Power, Neural Grafting
Technology: Graviton Theory, Digital Sentience, Biomachinery
Secret Project: The Cyborg Factory
Secret Project: The Cloudbase Academy
Citizens: Thinker
Chassis: Copter
Diplomatic Proposal: Unite Behind Me As Supreme Leader
Special Ability: Drop Pods
Improves Probe Team success rate.
Track and Level: Conquer 6
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Actually it led to graviton theory and the others. It required Air Power and Neural Grafting.
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Should have gone with Discover lvl 6: Fusion Power
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The Warrior's bland acronym, MMI, obscures the true horror of this monstrosity. Its inventors promise a new era of genius, but meanwhile unscrupulous power brokers use its forcible installation to violate the sanctity of unwilling human minds. They are creating their own private army of demons.
-Commissioner Pravin Lal, "Report on Human Rights"
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Even if our reality were artificial, it is the only one we have, and with no guarantees regarding the future it's better to make full use of it than waste time worrying about what could be possible but can never be known or changed.
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What you're conflating is the unknowable of the present with the unknowable of the future. It's not as though some African hunter gather ancestor from tens of thousands of years ago could have one day just said 'hey guys, how about quantum
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Would the brain know that it is in a artificial world? Now proof that it already has not happened.
Not such a new concept there: people were already thinking about it 2500 years ago [wikipedia.org]
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It's always a good time for an Alpha Centauri reference. Where's a "thumbs up" emoticon when you need it?
If I replace a leg ... (Score:2)
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It's configurable. You can make it sound like you stepped on a cat whenever the large toe flexes if you like.
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Does it only cost 6 million dollars? (Score:1)
FINALLY!!! (Score:1)
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NSF Funds? (Score:4, Funny)
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I was wondering also how a mind-machine interface related to bounced checks...
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I was wondering also how a mind-machine interface related to bounced checks...
Once they stop printing fiat money and go all digital currency, flip a switch, a thousand zeroes added to the economy. Another flip of a switch, what debt? I relish the day when my electro-mechanical overlords with the new, improved, Apple iBrain dictate my every thought and movement. Think of the children. America, love it or nuke it!
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Your first step is by far the most difficult, and quite possibly insurmountable. It's like saying "First, we need the warp drive." Star-hopping and intergalactic civilization follows naturally given that first highly implausible step.
Super Wrestler! (Score:1)
What ever happened to that guy?
Not enough coffee (Score:3)
Then read the summary and thought? Steve Austin? What the hell does Stone Cold have to do with this?
Self-indulgence, anyone? (Score:2, Insightful)
What is this stupid phrasing "Steve Austin, anyone?" about? Why do people use it? You can just hear the writer's pleading voice going "Eh? Eh? Aren't I clever?" as if you couldn't catch his meaning unless he elbowed you in the ribs a few more times.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steve_Austin_(fictional_character) 2 seconds on google to figure that out.
But then, it still is pretty stupid, especially considering there's a more famous steve austin that makes /no/ sense in this context.
Re: Re: Self-indulgence, anyone? (Score:1)
Haha, I plus one the post above this... Google brought me directly to Stone Cold... Read his bio, tried to figure out how they connected... nothing... "Maybe this is a metaphor for Stone Cold's amazing grasp of reality and how _in touch_ he is with life" was my first thought... but i'm gonna say it's probably not that.....
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I'm starting to realize how old I am. Without question or hesitation, I knew EXACTLY which SA he was talking about. As did every one else over 35 on here.
It's like bringing Tribbles up at a dinner party--only to realize that one there has a clue what you are talking about.
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What is this stupid phrasing "Steve Austin, anyone?" about? Why do people use it? You can just hear the writer's pleading voice going "Eh? Eh? Aren't I clever?" as if you couldn't catch his meaning unless he elbowed you in the ribs a few more times.
Hey, whatta bout Jamie Sommers?
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What is this stupid phrasing "Steve Austin, anyone?" about? Why do people use it? You can just hear the writer's pleading voice going "Eh? Eh? Aren't I clever?" as if you couldn't catch his meaning unless he elbowed you in the ribs a few more times.
Hey, whatta bout Jamie Sommers?
Yea, I'd like to get into her "Sleep number bed".
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Neither of which had neural interfaces (except maybe the zoom lens and nightvision eye), but I suppose Johnny Mnemonic would be too obvious. And yes, I mean the book version - I have never seen the film version sober enough to remember it and don't intend on changing that anytime soon.
Sony patented this (Score:1)
Get ready for the lawsuit
Well... (Score:2)
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Cliche time (Score:2)
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That's a common myth.
People can and do die in their dreams and suffer no ill effect (personal experience).
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The Matrix was just a stupid movie. It was chock full of plot holes and inconsistencies and scientific absurdities. I am still baffled why people love it so much, except for special effects.
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Neo: I thought it wasn't real Morpheus: Your mind makes it real Neo: If you're killed in the matrix, do you die here? Morpheus: The body cannot live without the mind Morpheus: Throughout human history, we have been dependent on machines to survive. Fate, it seems, is not without a sense of irony.
Am I the only one here that thinks this is a bad idea?
What? <br> tags?
Sweet!! (Score:2)
Hopefully in a few years we have artificial limbs that will be more lifelike and move more organically.
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Why artificial? In a few years I expect full limb replacements grown either from stemming and letting them grow from the missing location or from vats and having them sewn on.
Bionic arms and legs may be more cool, but I imagine you'd need to plug them in to do anything super-powered.
Misnomer (Score:1)
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Just build me the bionic penis. We can make it stronger... Faster... And now, detachable.
Sam Kinison FTW!
Hopefully.. (Score:2)
Hopefully this research will lead to better prosthetics.
I mean, the stuff in Deus Ex is pretty awesome and that's only a few years away according to the game, so them scientists better get crackin'.
I for one.... (Score:1)
...welcome our new Sensorimotor Neural Engineering overlords.
Radiotelepathy implants are already deployed (Score:1)
The problem is that it's being used for gross and mass human rights violations, without a pe