0:35 "With keyboards, rodents, monitors and touch screens now dominating our digital lives" I'll use the term "keyboard and rodent" instead of "keyboard and mouse" from now on. ;)
Wow Chris - amazing video! As a current psychology student with engineering qualifications, this was particularly interesting to me! It was fascinating to see how the Brainwave kit was employing biofeedback, the ability to train the brain to achieve a particular biologically mediated response, to produce usable results. The research you quote holds great promise but caution is perhaps required when interpreting such results as psychoneurological experiment repeatability is often poor. We know so little about how the brain actually functions, with much of our knowledge coming from the study of individuals with disabilities or brain injuries, but it is wonderful to see our developing understandings being used to improve the lives of those with sight or mobility loss. However, this form of technology raises ethical and philosophical concerns for there is the potential for such brain-computer interfaces to be used against somebody's will; if this was ever the case, would we be able to separate an individual's thoughts from those implanted externally? Even if the individual agrees to have the technology implant or directly read information or thoughts, is this morally or ethically acceptable? Should another human being have the right to change or read another individual's cognitions at such a fundamental level? What consequences for wider society does such technology bring? Ethical, legal and healthcare procedural safeguards need to constantly evolve but it is sobering to consider that somewhere at sometime, abuses of such BCI technology are likely to occur.
I've been following your channel for a while. I'm always impressed by the high quality of the research you do and the great graphics you make. Keep it up!
Very interesting, especially for a person like me with a serious muscular disease. For the moment I can control my computer with different tools like the Headmouse Extreme(A camera with an optical sensor which tracks a tiny target worn by the user in his/her forehead) and I can still push the mouse buttons. But as my muscles atrophies more and more I want be able to control the computer in that way, and then maybe brain-computer interfaces will be an option in the future.
This is WONDERFUL - thank you! I have been using an Interaxon Muse as part of my university research for a few years & its great to see an Explaining Computers video on the subject! I use mine to influence musical compositions and as you say, consumer level stuff is fairly macro requiring patience and practice as your never going to think "Play an Amaj chord" and the synthesizer plays an Amaj on cue. However the Muse raw data gives 4 channels of each Alpha, Beta, Delta and Gamma as well as pitch, yaw, roll, jaw clench and blink data! Lots of useful parameters to map to synthesis! If your interested Chris I can send you a link to my (old) journal paper but even if not I think you might find Rex Jung's transient hypofrontality ideas really interesting! Thanks again & keep up the great work!
Thank you Chris for reminding me that computers are more than just a desktop tool 👍 👍 I've been stuck in that "computers are mindless machines mentality" for some time 😀😁
Excellent presentation as always. I foresee the interfacing technology advancing thusly: Engineered organic replacements for the digital processors and interfaces will be developed, including RF transceivers that can be 'injected' into a brain and establish connections automatically, and derive its power source from the body. In the far future, this approach can be incorporated into the human genome, and would activate at a certain development milestone. Real telepathy would be achieved between ourselves and the machines we work with.
I totally agree -- "Part Two" of this video, over on ExplainingTheFuture, is all about organic implant technology: ruclips.net/video/f2C2NgOhUwg/видео.html
Awesome, again well done audio-visual production and no-nonsense informative content to general public and researchers around. Gotta have a look at your book too. cheers!
Thanks for another fascinating on computers and computer technology. This particular video was an excellent mix of information about a topic coupled with a demonstration of a consumer grade product related to the topic. As always, keep up the good work!
I want that book. Nowadays, this topic is very important. I guess that using tradicional EEG with electrodes over the scalp, BCIs are limited. But using SQUIDs or some non-invasive technology able to focus and scan directly hundreds of neurons (or each neuron, in the best of the cases), BCIs will have a reliable future. It depicts lesser noise and maybe an "easy to find" pattern. I think that people, in general, don't like the operating room, because all surgerys represent a risk, operate the head portrays a bigger risk.
I got to meet Professor Kevin Warwick whilst taking part in the 2014 Turing Test at the royal institute. He's a very interesting chap to talk too. At one point in time he and his wife were wirelessly connected and could in a very basic way sense what the other was. Very cool. We have a good chat about Neil Harbisson. A very interesting project using cybernetics to enhance our perception of the environment.
Kevin Warwick is indeed a very interesting guy -- I met him many years ago, shortly after this experiment. Part of it was so each could experience how the other felt pain. I tried to imagine the conversation when he proposed the idea of the experiment to her!
The very definition of a supportive wife right there. I was imagining the very same thing as I read Richards comment above, perhaps copious ammounts of wine were involved :-)
What a interesting coincidence. I just have started to reed the first book of AI ( I think ), Affective Computing by Rosalind W. Picard ( MIT 1997 ) where we can see the ancestors of all these devices. Interesting to see The Steve Mann´s work from 1980 to 1994 WearCam ( Media Lab MIT ). Thanks Chris.
Brain tutoring and the idea that you can transmit ideas is a terrifying one. Anybody who works on that project is helping 1984 to become a reality. Once we can send ideas using our minds, the thought police will exist. And given the PC culture we are currently suffering from, 1984 could become a reality.
I know someone who has a cochlear implant. He comments that he can't pick up subtle things in peoples voices, and of course he doesn't have stereo hearing so can't tell where a sound is coming from. The latter thing is shared by my father, who has two hearing aids, he can hear you but is utterly incapable of detecting where you are shouting from. It's pretty surreal when you stand close to him and say something and he is spinning around trying to detect the source of the sound using his eyes. Anyway, I wouldn't be surprised if there is some sort of tech that comes out that will fix this, perhaps using echolocation, and which may use some sort of brain-computer interface (or at the very least bone conduction devices) to impart 3d sound directly to the brain and bypassing the damaged sensory organ(s).
All they can do is measure your attention roughly and you are scared they might read your thought or something? For that you'll have to wait a least a decade
Wow, that was interesting video... thanks Christopher! I suspect that the Mr Barnatt we see on screen is an image projected from a large brain in a tank with a neural link attached directly to the internet. I for one welcome our new Cyber overlord.
I’m pretty sure about 20 yrs ago there was a service or treatment that used external electrodes attached to the head to help adjust brain waves. A certain wave may help relaxation or increase attention and I believe this was rather expensive treatment. Sounds like that boxed head sensor you opened has reduced the cost and has been commercialized to a wider audience. Since this is the first time I’ve heard of technology in twenty years I’m wondering just how effective the technology is.
Yep, Watched this after you flagged it for me. Exact thing I was saying sorta kinda but close ? LOL It's inevitable that there is going to be direct human Machine Interfacing in the future.
Honestly, if they want this to take off, they need to push it into the Enthusiast gaming and media groups.... Like, Prosthetic limbs were pretty crap until the Adult Industry got involved, and EEG was Medical only until EEG Powered Cat Ears became a thing and 6 years later we have bluetooth enabled brain devices.
Sounds great though I can imagine that if you are linked to a wider system this might open up a whole new world of computer firewalls and virus threats, and privacy regulations.
Yikes. I have a really hard time believing that humans would need to wire a chimp’s brain to a robot arm to further this technology. Hopefully future research is driven by the patient’s need for health and accessibility, and less by structures of the past that incentivize suffering and exploitation. Sorry to bring my criticism to your comments section. Aside from hearing about that ridiculous experiment, I rather enjoyed the video. I’m looking forward to future brain/computer interfaces. Mostly non-invasive consumer stuff for hobbyists, but also the more invasive direct applications. The implications for reducing disability are enormous, and transhumanism is coming (wether we like it or not)
Thanks for the video. Chris I was sceptical at watching the video. Then I saw the brain implant technology, it got me interested. There is a long way to go. I watched to the end. I hope this technology will come of age and assist people with disabilities. I have 20/400 vision. I normally rely on a screen reader or Braille display. How did I see the video? I was nose to a 60 inch screen listenening very carefully, with a ten times zoom and a 4x magnifier glass, (40x in total) scrolling sideways and up and down, when I thought there was text or graphics. I realise many are less fortunate than me. Technology has helped me a great deal. The future seems promising. Chris, is the book available electronically? Best wishes from the UK.
What should be the range b/w the operator and the person so that the brain computer interface can work,how can we take it is there treatment,and how much does it cost
While this branch of science is eventually very interesting, I am feared by two scenarios. One is the approximate knowledge we have about the brain, and scientists who believe to know all of it, no matter what. The other is greed. Today, nobody would invest their life's into an experiment, because the engine driving the science car is only more money, not more knowledge.
I'm reminded of a 1970's sci-fi film with George Segal; chap has his murderous tendencies curtailed by some sort of implant that - naturally - goes wrong. (Later: The Terminal Man, 1974, from a Michael Chriton novel.)
does anyone know where to buy a cheap headset like that because I am working on a project. It does not need to be accurate, it would be nice nice if it gives an analog signal depending on how focused I am but for my application a digital 1 or 0 could work. I have looked everywhere but I can only find expensive medical equipment. my price range is not that high.
Who are you truly trying to trick? You do not need attached electroids in order to stimulate the mind! The purpose of identifying an adapter would be for the pure use of sales and nothing more. Unless we are talking about, "hiding" the breach of our liberties...
08:50 - is it possible to connect visual neurons to audio neurons and transmit audio information through eye cell? ;) Actualy it would be interesting to transmite any information through eye cell. ;) Let's try!
@@ExplainingComputers Yep. It is like to add a third arm. DNA has no information how to build neuron network for the new organs. It is why we need to teach a students using multiple knowledge. Synthetic biology is silicon electronics of the future. :)
2019: Maybe its good idea! 2020: Gabe Newell - Brain Computer Interface its great idea!!! If you die in game you die and in real life xD.... SORRY FOR MY ENGLISH
I will only ever use non-invasive versions of these. eventually, we will have to have invasive versions of these forced by governments, then permanently erasing privacy forever and after
I'm sorry to say this, but I'm really, really tired of that jingle. I have to say to myself more and more that the rest of the video is likely to be worth the pain.
The follow-up to this video on my ExplainingTheFuture channel is at: ruclips.net/video/f2C2NgOhUwg/видео.html Enjoy! :)
ExplainingComputers, Would this be consider a augmentation?
It would indeed.
Did the head set make you more intelligent?...lol
I don't think so -- but it did make me think a bit differently about my brain . . .
Like the idea of feed back so i know if I'm focused or not....
0:35 "With keyboards, rodents, monitors and touch screens now dominating our digital lives"
I'll use the term "keyboard and rodent" instead of "keyboard and mouse" from now on. ;)
Why not just call it keyboard and rat?
And, there we are! I finally found the one with the brain graphics! I love your work. 0:43
@5:19: "I'm glad there's a quick start guide for a brain interface..."
That subtle dry humor is at least a quarter of the reason I stay subscribed.
Wow Chris - amazing video! As a current psychology student with engineering qualifications, this was particularly interesting to me! It was fascinating to see how the Brainwave kit was employing biofeedback, the ability to train the brain to achieve a particular biologically mediated response, to produce usable results. The research you quote holds great promise but caution is perhaps required when interpreting such results as psychoneurological experiment repeatability is often poor. We know so little about how the brain actually functions, with much of our knowledge coming from the study of individuals with disabilities or brain injuries, but it is wonderful to see our developing understandings being used to improve the lives of those with sight or mobility loss. However, this form of technology raises ethical and philosophical concerns for there is the potential for such brain-computer interfaces to be used against somebody's will; if this was ever the case, would we be able to separate an individual's thoughts from those implanted externally? Even if the individual agrees to have the technology implant or directly read information or thoughts, is this morally or ethically acceptable? Should another human being have the right to change or read another individual's cognitions at such a fundamental level? What consequences for wider society does such technology bring? Ethical, legal and healthcare procedural safeguards need to constantly evolve but it is sobering to consider that somewhere at sometime, abuses of such BCI technology are likely to occur.
Yeah targeted individuals… compensations scheme should start now. People are dying.
Thank you so much for this video! Please keep the channel running, I'm a big fan of your presentation style!
Thanks!
I've been following your channel for a while. I'm always impressed by the high quality of the research you do and the great graphics you make. Keep it up!
Thanks. :)
Fantastic! Can't wait to share this with my TOK student when exploring sense perception extensions.
Sharing with students is what this kind of video is for. :)
Very interesting, especially for a person like me with a serious muscular disease. For the moment I can control my computer with different tools like the Headmouse Extreme(A camera with an optical sensor which tracks a tiny target worn by the user in his/her forehead) and I can still push the mouse buttons. But as my muscles atrophies more and more I want be able to control the computer in that way, and then maybe brain-computer interfaces will be an option in the future.
What would you consider better - a replacement arm or just an interface directly to the mouse controls
I have one already and its so painful that im gonna end my life.
@@gollygothgrrrl9626 What ?
@@chadoftoons A replacement arm if the response is that fast of a real arm.
Absolutely outstanding. This video deserves 100 million view. Great work mate.
Many thanks.
This is WONDERFUL - thank you!
I have been using an Interaxon Muse as part of my university research for a few years & its great to see an Explaining Computers video on the subject!
I use mine to influence musical compositions and as you say, consumer level stuff is fairly macro requiring patience and practice as your never going to think "Play an Amaj chord" and the synthesizer plays an Amaj on cue.
However the Muse raw data gives 4 channels of each Alpha, Beta, Delta and Gamma as well as pitch, yaw, roll, jaw clench and blink data! Lots of useful parameters to map to synthesis!
If your interested Chris I can send you a link to my (old) journal paper but even if not I think you might find Rex Jung's transient hypofrontality ideas really interesting!
Thanks again & keep up the great work!
Thanks for this -- and please do send me the link. :)
Thank you Chris for reminding me that computers are more than just a desktop tool 👍 👍
I've been stuck in that "computers are mindless machines mentality" for some time 😀😁
Excellent presentation as always. I foresee the interfacing technology advancing thusly: Engineered organic replacements for the digital processors and interfaces will be developed, including RF transceivers that can be 'injected' into a brain and establish connections automatically, and derive its power source from the body. In the far future, this approach can be incorporated into the human genome, and would activate at a certain development milestone. Real telepathy would be achieved between ourselves and the machines we work with.
I totally agree -- "Part Two" of this video, over on ExplainingTheFuture, is all about organic implant technology: ruclips.net/video/f2C2NgOhUwg/видео.html
Awesome, again well done audio-visual production and no-nonsense informative content to general public and researchers around. Gotta have a look at your book too. cheers!
Fascinating subject Chris, thanks for your research and clear summary!
5:18 "I am glad there is a quick start guide for a brain interface" - made me laugh! love your vids!
Fascinating study! Thank You very much indeed!
Thanks for another fascinating on computers and computer technology. This particular video was an excellent mix of information about a topic coupled with a demonstration of a consumer grade product related to the topic. As always, keep up the good work!
Very interesting to see what the future of computing may be going. Nice video!
Extremely Interesting, and well researched. A technology that could be very helpful, but, as we all know has a potentially dark side
I want that book. Nowadays, this topic is very important. I guess that using tradicional EEG with electrodes over the scalp, BCIs are limited. But using SQUIDs or some non-invasive technology able to focus and scan directly hundreds of neurons (or each neuron, in the best of the cases), BCIs will have a reliable future. It depicts lesser noise and maybe an "easy to find" pattern. I think that people, in general, don't like the operating room, because all surgerys represent a risk, operate the head portrays a bigger risk.
I got to meet Professor Kevin Warwick whilst taking part in the 2014 Turing Test at the royal institute. He's a very interesting chap to talk too. At one point in time he and his wife were wirelessly connected and could in a very basic way sense what the other was. Very cool. We have a good chat about Neil Harbisson. A very interesting project using cybernetics to enhance our perception of the environment.
Kevin Warwick is indeed a very interesting guy -- I met him many years ago, shortly after this experiment. Part of it was so each could experience how the other felt pain. I tried to imagine the conversation when he proposed the idea of the experiment to her!
The very definition of a supportive wife right there. I was imagining the very same thing as I read Richards comment above, perhaps copious ammounts of wine were involved :-)
(before watching): Yosh!, EC is here!!! (Drink coffee)
(after watching): Future is here too.... great vid sir.
brilliants topic as always. Thank you master, wondering what level of cyborg-fusion can be reached within 20 years from now!
What a interesting coincidence. I just have started to reed the first book of AI ( I think ), Affective Computing by Rosalind W. Picard ( MIT 1997 ) where we can see the ancestors of all these devices. Interesting to see The Steve Mann´s work from 1980 to 1994 WearCam ( Media Lab MIT ). Thanks Chris.
Brain tutoring and the idea that you can transmit ideas is a terrifying one. Anybody who works on that project is helping 1984 to become a reality. Once we can send ideas using our minds, the thought police will exist. And given the PC culture we are currently suffering from, 1984 could become a reality.
Read and write access directly to brains makes brain washing 2.0 possible
A bio-DSP based on human cells. Any information from the universities of EU, UK, USA? We all need to start talking about devices based on human cells.
you did miss an important contender, minimally invasive implant, similar to how heart pacers work, you can look up Synchron
I would like to see a video dedicated to the Neurosky MindWave exploring some of the applications made for it.
Great idea. Though sadly this video has not proved popular. :(
Another winner!! Fascinating as always.
You never disappoint!
They do a lot of this research near my house. I live a few miles from the Brown University Neuroscience department building.
What a small world it is! :)
I know someone who has a cochlear implant. He comments that he can't pick up subtle things in peoples voices, and of course he doesn't have stereo hearing so can't tell where a sound is coming from.
The latter thing is shared by my father, who has two hearing aids, he can hear you but is utterly incapable of detecting where you are shouting from. It's pretty surreal when you stand close to him and say something and he is spinning around trying to detect the source of the sound using his eyes.
Anyway, I wouldn't be surprised if there is some sort of tech that comes out that will fix this, perhaps using echolocation, and which may use some sort of brain-computer interface (or at the very least bone conduction devices) to impart 3d sound directly to the brain and bypassing the damaged sensory organ(s).
Bci bmi for mk slavery
Wow nice topic.I remember years ago I saw a movie called universal soldier I guess.
Are you reading my mind? I wanted to see a video like this.
I wouldn't attach any device like those mention unless the software was completely open source.
All they can do is measure your attention roughly and you are scared they might read your thought or something? For that you'll have to wait a least a decade
We are now one step closer to Cyberpunk, Ghost in the shell and Joe 90....
I am impressed and terrified at the same time.
Very interesting, and i am curious too see how fast this progresses.
Wow, that was interesting video... thanks Christopher!
I suspect that the Mr Barnatt we see on screen is an image projected from a large brain in a tank with a neural link attached directly to the internet. I for one welcome our new Cyber overlord.
My secret is out . . .
Great video ! I'm looking out for an interface to expand my internal memory to cloud storage. Since I easily forget, they better hurry...
very nice application updates .
I’m pretty sure about 20 yrs ago there was a service or treatment that used external electrodes attached to the head to help adjust brain waves. A certain wave may help relaxation or increase attention and I believe this was rather expensive treatment. Sounds like that boxed head sensor you opened has reduced the cost and has been commercialized to a wider audience. Since this is the first time I’ve heard of technology in twenty years I’m wondering just how effective the technology is.
Not 1st, I was watching EF. All this Christopher, who could ask for anything more.
Watching this video I thought I have to think something beyond the techonolgy... but I have no idea what it is. Thanks for the video.
Great work! Thanks for the video.
I love this video, It's very informative, will you be making follow up ever?
Glad you like it. :) I have already made a follow-up: ruclips.net/video/f2C2NgOhUwg/видео.html :)
@@ExplainingComputers Sorry I didn't see that in the comments, I appreciate the reply :)
Yep, Watched this after you flagged it for me. Exact thing I was saying sorta kinda but close ? LOL It's inevitable that there is going to be direct human Machine Interfacing in the future.
We see that . . . not everybody agrees. :)
Honestly, if they want this to take off, they need to push it into the Enthusiast gaming and media groups.... Like, Prosthetic limbs were pretty crap until the Adult Industry got involved, and EEG was Medical only until EEG Powered Cat Ears became a thing and 6 years later we have bluetooth enabled brain devices.
I imagine you are correct. :)
Sounds great though I can imagine that if you are linked to a wider system this might open up a whole new world of computer firewalls and virus threats, and privacy regulations.
My brain is unsupported :( V4.5 or latter
I didn't think of this yet to bad we can't update to a new version while running eh
Brain tutoring, considering the state of the education system, is probably going to be an order of magnitude more contentious than RFID implants.
Yikes. I have a really hard time believing that humans would need to wire a chimp’s brain to a robot arm to further this technology. Hopefully future research is driven by the patient’s need for health and accessibility, and less by structures of the past that incentivize suffering and exploitation.
Sorry to bring my criticism to your comments section. Aside from hearing about that ridiculous experiment, I rather enjoyed the video. I’m looking forward to future brain/computer interfaces. Mostly non-invasive consumer stuff for hobbyists, but also the more invasive direct applications. The implications for reducing disability are enormous, and transhumanism is coming (wether we like it or not)
Thanks for the video. Chris I was sceptical at watching the video. Then I saw the brain implant technology, it got me interested. There is a long way to go. I watched to the end. I hope this technology will come of age and assist people with disabilities. I have 20/400 vision. I normally rely on a screen reader or Braille display. How did I see the video? I was nose to a 60 inch screen listenening very carefully, with a ten times zoom and a 4x magnifier glass, (40x in total) scrolling sideways and up and down, when I thought there was text or graphics. I realise many are less fortunate than me. Technology has helped me a great deal. The future seems promising. Chris, is the book available electronically? Best wishes from the UK.
Thanks for this and for watching. There is a long way to go, but technology progresses exponentially. Digital Genesis is on Kindle.
Awesome, please keep up the good work!
Very fascinating video.
I heard some researchers turned a rat into a remote control rat by wiring up the brain. I feel like that is relevant to the convo.
Very relevant.
The Orion visual cortex interface image reminded me of Davros.
Enjoyed it! Thank you.
Informative and interesting.
That headset reminds me of the movie "Brainstorm"
Awesome video. I'd suggest that you show off eye detection mouse. Not a must though. Overall, nice BCI video.
Cool idea; noted.
@@ExplainingComputers Thank you.
very interesting. thank you!
What should be the range b/w the operator and the person so that the brain computer interface can work,how can we take it is there treatment,and how much does it cost
"Under The Skull" sounds like a great title to a movie.
It does!
While this branch of science is eventually very interesting, I am feared by two scenarios. One is the approximate knowledge we have about the brain, and scientists who believe to know all of it, no matter what. The other is greed. Today, nobody would invest their life's into an experiment, because the engine driving the science car is only more money, not more knowledge.
Thanks
Hosted by the former star of *It's Pat!*
That's some Forbidden Planet type of tech there.
I'm reminded of a 1970's sci-fi film with George Segal; chap has his murderous tendencies curtailed by some sort of implant that - naturally - goes wrong. (Later: The Terminal Man, 1974, from a Michael Chriton novel.)
Scary but interesting.....The Borg...!!!
This tech can single handedly solve blindness and people with speech problems (ex: Steven Hawking)
I LOVE THIS SO MUCH THANKS FOR SUCH A NICE EXPLANATION, I SUBBED YOU
Thanks for the sub -- welcome aboard!
Wetware? I love this Chirs... U ROCK MAN!!
This is what turned Doctor Octavious into a crazy serial killer.
That 2nd Sight thing reminded me of Geordi LaForge.
does anyone know where to buy a cheap headset like that because I am working on a project. It does not need to be accurate, it would be nice nice if it gives an analog signal depending on how focused I am but for my application a digital 1 or 0 could work. I have looked everywhere but I can only find expensive medical equipment. my price range is not that high.
Who are you truly trying to trick? You do not need attached electroids in order to stimulate the mind! The purpose of identifying an adapter would be for the pure use of sales and nothing more. Unless we are talking about, "hiding" the breach of our liberties...
Thank you ,I had to make a presentation on this . My teacher said that the input and output terms are switched . Can you pls confirm sir
It's alive! It's alive!
08:50 - is it possible to connect visual neurons to audio neurons and transmit audio information through eye cell? ;) Actualy it would be interesting to transmite any information through eye cell. ;) Let's try!
Probably. But the brain would have to learn to decode and make sense of such signals. Interesting idea!
@@ExplainingComputers Yep. It is like to add a third arm. DNA has no information how to build neuron network for the new organs. It is why we need to teach a students using multiple knowledge. Synthetic biology is silicon electronics of the future. :)
@@ExplainingComputers A cell which will decode radio waves in the signals of a human neurons. It is the first step to my future I want to live. :)
2019: Maybe its good idea!
2020:
Gabe Newell - Brain Computer Interface its great idea!!! If you die in game you die and in real life xD....
SORRY FOR MY ENGLISH
Jedi era is coming.
Looking forward to our cybernetic future. Cyberpunk 2077 here we come.
Keyboards, rodents, monitors and touchscreen haha.
Where is the Brain to Like Interface for another great EC video?
Yes, we must get one of those! :)
Update please!
Someone is activating my brain. I don't know where they are implementing from. Please let me know if you can find out please help my sir. thanking you
Cool
nice video
I will only ever use non-invasive versions of these. eventually, we will have to have invasive versions of these forced by governments, then permanently erasing privacy forever and after
This reminds me of Neuromancer, Count Zero, and Mona Lisa Overdrive by William Gibson. Cyberpunk in a nutshell. 😁 🤖
They are/were great books. :)
Neural computer interfaces, very scary and ethically questionable stuff.
We are indeed venturing into a brave new world.
Indeed Mark! Very big ethics questions here.
Why am i no longer subscribed to this channel?
I don't know! Do please subscribe again! Videos every Sunday. :)
nice upload
Thanks. :)
Good luck when that technocratic dystopia is fully locked in place and you realize there is no escape. Fools.
HOW I USE
Bob.Omb’s Modified Win10PEx64 V4.0 - Best Rescue Disk 2018??
A Nice video! Thx
Thanks. :)
By the way, don't you think it's time to get another jingle?
I may do a remix at some point. But familiarity is very useful to build and maintain channel awareness.
@@ExplainingComputers It's a really good jingle I even hum along :)
I'm sorry to say this, but I'm really, really tired of that jingle. I have to say to myself more and more that the rest of the video is likely to be worth the pain.
I cannot please everybody!
At 0:42 it becomes scary...
Can't wait for my brain implants.