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Aug 22, 2016
The Tiny Brain Chip That May Supercharge Your Mind
Posted by Elmar Arunov in categories: biotech/medical, computing, cyborgs, neuroscience
How will we interact with the intelligent machines of the future? If you’re asking Bryan Johnson, founder of startup Kernel, he’ll tell you those machines should be implanted inside our brains.
His team is working with top neuroscientists to build a tiny brain chip—also known as a neuroprosthetic —to help people with disease-related brain damage. In the long term, though, Johnson sees the product applicable to anyone who wants a bit of a brain boost.
Yes, some might flag this technology as yet another invention leading us toward a future where technology just helps the privileged get further in life.
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Aug 22, 2016
This Device Connects Your Contact Lenses To WiFi
Posted by Elmar Arunov in category: internet
Aug 22, 2016
Scientists unlock a secret to Latinos’ longevity, with hopes of slowing aging for everyone
Posted by Bruno Henrique de Souza in category: life extension
Cientistas descobrem um segredo para a longevidade nos Latinos ’, com a esperança de retardar o envelhecimento para todos.
A pesquisa também ajuda a responder a perguntas sobre por que algumas pessoas morrem jovens, enquanto outros vivem até a velhice, e que doenças crônicas têm a ver com o envelhecimento.
Aug 22, 2016
Changing the Nature of Nature
Posted by Bruno Henrique de Souza in categories: bioengineering, biological, genetics
Alterar a natureza da natureza.
Inovadores estão trabalhando em direção a um mundo no qual a matéria viva é totalmente programável por meio da biologia sintética onde as pessoas já não são apenas consumidores de tecnologia, mas os cidadãos de um mundo tecnológico.
Aug 20, 2016
Scientists Design Genome For Upgraded E. Coli
Posted by Aleksandar Vukovic in categories: bioengineering, biotech/medical, genetics
A team of Harvard Medical School scientists, which includes genetics professor George Church, have designed a bacterial genome that has been rewritten on a massive scale, with changes in more than 62,000 spots.
They haven’t used it to make living E. coli yet, but the findings, reported today in Science, mark progress towards genetically engineered bacteria that could make new materials without risk of exchanging genes with organisms in the wild.
“It‘s an important step forward for demonstrating the malleability of the genetic code and how entirely new types of biological functions and properties can be extracted from organisms through genomes that have been recoded,” Farren Isaacs of Yale University, who has worked with the team in the past, told Nature.
Aug 20, 2016
Augmented Future Open Bionics Trailer — Deus EX: Mankind Divided
Posted by Lily Graca in categories: cyborgs, entertainment, transhumanism
Open Bionics, Eidos-Montréal and Razer are working together to bring Deus Ex inspired augmentations to life.
http://gaming.youtube.com/gamespot
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Aug 20, 2016
Now you can explore for yourself, if life really is better under the sea
Posted by Bryan Gatton in category: futurism
Aug 20, 2016
This Little Silver Cube Could Be the Future of Personal DNA Testing
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in category: biotech/medical
Aug 20, 2016
We Might Live in a Virtual Universe — But It Doesn’t Really Matter
Posted by Elmar Arunov in categories: computing, Elon Musk
You might have heard the news: Our world could be a clever computer simulation that creates the impression of living in a real world. Elon Musk brought up this topic a few weeks ago. Truth be told — he is probably right. However, there is a very important point missing in this whole “real vs. fake” discussion: It actually makes no difference. But first…why might our world be a simulation?
Musk is nowhere near the first one to suggest our world might be fake. The idea reaches back to the ancient Greeks, though what we call a computer simulation, the ancient Greeks called a dream.
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