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Re: What could go wrong?

By: Decomposed in 6TH POPE | Recommend this post (0)
Tue, 22 Dec 20 5:32 PM | 47 view(s)
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Msg. 10136 of 58599
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Over the weekend, my son called me over to his computer to show me something one of his on-line buddies is doing that Joey thinks is cool. For good reason - it IS cool.

What I saw was the friend's bedroom with a Windows display front and center. The friend's hands reached forward into the video and began manipulating icons and doing other things on the screen. What's so interesting about that? How about that the computer screen wasn't real. It was virtual. The friend was wearing a Microsoft headset so that it looked completely real to him and to those of us who were on the call with him.

Pretty neat! In fact, I could see through the virtual computer screen as it was slightly translucent. I don't know if the friend could as well. He said that the screen appeared solid and crisp to him. He also said that he didn't come away with any mental afflictions after wearing the headset for hours. (When I tried V.R. for half an hour a few years ago, I felt a bit woozy for the next half hour.)

So this is what's on the way. The friend said he was given this Microsoft hardware by UVA as part of a project he's doing. For you or me, it would run $2,500. Requisite software is another $1,000. But this is new technology. Safe to say it will be available in a few years for $1,000 or so. That's not unreasonable.








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Gold is $1,581/oz today. When it hits $2,000, it will be up 26.5%. Let's see how long that takes. - De 3/11/2013 - ANSWER: 7 Years, 5 Months


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The above is a reply to the following message:
What could go wrong?
By: Decomposed
in 6TH POPE
Tue, 22 Dec 20 5:17 PM
Msg. 10135 of 58599

December 1, 2020

FACEBOOK REVEALS PLANS FOR MIND-READING DEVICE IN LEAKED AUDIO RECORDING

'We all get the privilege of seeing the future because we are making it,' firm’s CTO says in private meeting

by Anthony Cuthbertson
Independent.co.uk



Facebook has revealed more details about its secretive plans to release a mind-reading device, telling employees in a private meeting on Tuesday how it will work.

In an audio recording of the meeting, obtained by BuzzFeed News, Facebook’s chief technology officer Mike Schroepfer explained how a neural sensor would translate people’s thoughts into computer commands, such as typing or holding a virtual object in a video game.

“We all get the privilege of seeing the future because we are making it,” he said.

Mr Schroepfer also said the firm’s public perception when it came to issues like privacy would need to be addressed before releasing any such product.

“We have to build responsibly to earn trust and the right to continue to grow. It’s imperative that we get this right so that people around the world get all these amazing technologies… without experiencing the downsides."

Rumours that the technology giant has been working on a neural device have been circulating for several years, though few details have emerged of what form it will take.

Last year, Facebook bought a neural interface startup called CTRL-Labs in a deal estimated to be worth around $1 billion (£740 million). Facebook’s head of augmented reality, Andrew Bosworth, said at the time that the acquisition would “open up new creative possibilities” and “change the way we connect”.

The US-based startup was working on a high-tech wristband at the time of the takeover, which it claimed could measure neural activity from physical gestures and translate it into computer controls.

Earlier in 2019, Facebook divulged details of a separate type of brain-computer interface that used a headset instead of a wristband to read thoughts.

In a paper published in Nature Communications, Facebook researchers described how the headset relied on an algorithm capable of decoding brain activity to instantly transcribe what a person is saying into text.

The non-invasive wearable device could already recognise a small set of words and phrases.

In a blog post published at the same time as the research, Facebook wrote: “Imagine a world where all the knowledge, fun, and utility of today’s smartphones were instantly accessible and completely hands-free.”


A headset used by Facebook’s brain-machine interface researchers

During the staff meeting on Tuesday, executives also unveiled an AI assistant tool that summarizes news articles on users’ Facebook feeds.

The TLDR tool - named after the acronym for “too long, didn’t read” - will condense long form articles to bullet points, potentially depriving even more valuable web traffic away from news publishers.

Facebook did not immediately respond to a request for comment from The Independent.

http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-and-tech/facebook-mind-reading-neural-sensor-b1774825.html


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