FuzzyDunlop
Diamond Member
- Jan 30, 2008
 
- 3,260
 
- 12
 
- 81
 
Potential awesomeness:
You and your significant other have chips plugged in, have awesome sex, then switch chips to experience each others' afterglow. :awe:
Potential horror:
Memory chips become popular, people get addicted to them since once you remove them you're left feeling "lost", and "actors" who are hired to record their memories for retail end up leaking hidden thoughts and feelings onto the recording, so eventually you end up with thought pollution. Imagine a new popular chip series having background schizophrenia accidentally saved to it.
I'm curious. What happens when they swap chips from one mouse to another? How hard would it be to transfer data/memories?
Can you imagine downloading a skill, such as playing guitar or race car driving, and actually going out and using it?
That would just be mindblowing.
This is a pipe dream though, this would level the playing field to much our puppet masters would never allow it. (except for themselves of course)
It would be great even if the chip can only be "taught" with the brain it's implanted in. Being able to create a stable long-term memory of something with only one read-through would be an immense advantage. (Hopefully these things will have either an efficient compression scheme, or lots of storage space.That is assuming memories are easily interchangeable/writable. Just being able to store memory is a long way from being actually able to interpret it. Heck, computers are data storing monsters, yet they are still dumber than lobotomized cockroaches.
Or they'll have a fun pricing scheme: The raw data package is $50. The Comprehension and Application software package is $249950.8 year degrees will become a $250,000 purchase and you get it instantly. You'll have 18 year olds performing advanced surgery.
Amazing. Hope they get it all worked out. Imagine being able to license your CCIE for $10,000 a year. Plug it in and away you go. Stop paying the fees, they flip the switch. Still want it? Going to trust your brain to the torrented CCIE? Its one thing to run pirated software on your PC but how about your brain?
Well, if your brain is the only thing that can interpret it, and it shares no structure with anyone else's memory, you've essentially made a one time pad.Will it support encryption?
:sneaky:
I'm interested to know how you would be able to identify that "yes, this memory is being stored to chip"It would be great even if the chip can only be "taught" with the brain it's implanted in. Being able to create a stable long-term memory of something with only one read-through would be an immense advantage. (Hopefully these things will have either an efficient compression scheme, or lots of storage space.)
Or they'll have a fun pricing scheme: The raw data package is $50. The Comprehension and Application software package is $249950.![]()
I have a hard time believing this but then again I can't believe plenty of shit technology does these days.
The only problem with Alzheimer patients would be that they already lost their memories but this would be nice to let them start again. Shit is crazy.
This will be bigger than Industrial Revolution + Information Age combined.
