Forget voice control or gesture recognition.Gadgets may soon link directly to our brains
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Forget voice control or gesture recognition.Gadgets may soon link directly to our brains
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Dr. Kim Solez presents "The Technological Singularity Explained and Promoted" on January 10th, 2013 in the Technology and Future of Medicine course LABMP 590 http://www.singularitycourse.comat the University of Alberta in Edmonton Canada. Via Szabolcs Kósa Delete the scoop?
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Computer science researchers at Northwestern University have developed a way to exert limited control on how people move, pushing them out of their regular travel patterns. The key: tapping into some of their cell phone applications. Via Sakis Koukouvis Delete the scoop?
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May 16, 2012 5:51 AM
Ericsson aims to turn our anatomy into a USB key -- a bridge between gadgets with its 'Connected Me' technology. Via brianlmerritt, Sakis Koukouvis, ABroaderView, olsen jay nelson Delete the scoop?
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