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Cory Shallow's avatar
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Seeing as neurorobotics are beginning to grasp direct brain-to-machine and brain-to-brain commands, and artificial intelligence has reached the critical learning stage (via projects like the automated jet pilot);
About how much longer will it take before these branches of study intersect to produce nice things like a commonly desired logical augmentation and direct robotic appendage control?
Why have advancements in these fields stagnated while study focuses on the fine tuning of the less imaginative aspects of their potential?
Mainly; Is there evidence to suggest that (like much breakthrough work in the past) this plausibly existent technology is being reserved by governments?
Cory Shallow

Mainly; Is there evidence to suggest that (like much breakthrough work in the past) this plausibly existent technology is being reserved by governments?



duh

think about what classic stuff the govnt didnt mind saying they were doing but
"found no conclusive evidence" or what have you, even tho they spent millions of dollars on them:

Project MK-Ultra
The Montauk Project
The Disclosure Project
A skunkworks project
The Huemul Project
The High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP)
The Philadelphia Experiment
The chemtrail conspiracy theory
Water fluoridation
Project Rainbow

Ok you get it and how about this here huh?

Patent in the USA government patent office site for human teleportation
Cory Shallow
Seeing as neurorobotics are beginning to grasp direct brain-to-machine and brain-to-brain commands, and artificial intelligence has reached the critical learning stage (via projects like the automated jet pilot);
About how much longer will it take before these branches of study intersect to produce nice things like a commonly desired logical augmentation and direct robotic appendage control?
Why have advancements in these fields stagnated while study focuses on the fine tuning of the less imaginative aspects of their potential?
Mainly; Is there evidence to suggest that (like much breakthrough work in the past) this plausibly existent technology is being reserved by governments?


there already exist some very promising cybernetic prothstetic prototypes, including a few that can actually return sensation when touching something.
Cory Shallow's avatar
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ngc3zero79
Cory Shallow

Mainly; Is there evidence to suggest that (like much breakthrough work in the past) this plausibly existent technology is being reserved by governments?



duh

think about what classic stuff the govnt didnt mind saying they were doing but
"found no conclusive evidence" or what have you, even tho they spent millions of dollars on them:

Project MK-Ultra
The Montauk Project
The Disclosure Project
A skunkworks project
The Huemul Project
The High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP)
The Philadelphia Experiment
The chemtrail conspiracy theory
Water fluoridation
Project Rainbow

Ok you get it and how about this here huh?

Patent in the USA government patent office site for human teleportation


Well aware of all of those things, candleboy. None of those projects has a single thing to do with human robotics.
Cory Shallow's avatar
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A Liberal Media
Cory Shallow
Seeing as neurorobotics are beginning to grasp direct brain-to-machine and brain-to-brain commands, and artificial intelligence has reached the critical learning stage (via projects like the automated jet pilot);
About how much longer will it take before these branches of study intersect to produce nice things like a commonly desired logical augmentation and direct robotic appendage control?
Why have advancements in these fields stagnated while study focuses on the fine tuning of the less imaginative aspects of their potential?
Mainly; Is there evidence to suggest that (like much breakthrough work in the past) this plausibly existent technology is being reserved by governments?


there already exist some very promising cybernetic prothstetic prototypes, including a few that can actually return sensation when touching something.


Nerve responses? Cool. That's a big step.
Got article?
Cory Shallow
A Liberal Media
Cory Shallow
Seeing as neurorobotics are beginning to grasp direct brain-to-machine and brain-to-brain commands, and artificial intelligence has reached the critical learning stage (via projects like the automated jet pilot);
About how much longer will it take before these branches of study intersect to produce nice things like a commonly desired logical augmentation and direct robotic appendage control?
Why have advancements in these fields stagnated while study focuses on the fine tuning of the less imaginative aspects of their potential?
Mainly; Is there evidence to suggest that (like much breakthrough work in the past) this plausibly existent technology is being reserved by governments?


there already exist some very promising cybernetic prothstetic prototypes, including a few that can actually return sensation when touching something.


Nerve responses? Cool. That's a big step.
Got article?


http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/8313037.stm

not the most flexible prosthetic, but its leaps and bounds above some hook.

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