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Human brain cell wetware plays Doom, fly’s mind uploaded: AI Eye
The FlySilicon Valley startup Eon Systems claims to have successfully uploaded the mind of a fly and placed it inside a ...
Apr. 29—Computer development has taken a wide path away from the silicon-based hardware we've grown accustomed to. Research has been conducted into various other ways of building even more efficient ...
A new method for connecting neurons in neuromorphic wetware has been developed. The wetware comprises conductive polymer wires grown in a three-dimensional configuration, done by applying square-wave ...
Looking ahead: Swiss researchers are exploring the frontier of computing by creating processors from living cells, a field known as biocomputing. Their work, though inspired by concepts often seen in ...
Inside a lab in the picturesque Swiss town of Vevey, a scientist gives tiny clumps of human brain cells the nutrient-rich fluid they need to stay alive.
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The wetware frontier: The bio-labs of India
The history of computing has primarily revolved around physical materials. From the silicon transistors of the mid-20th century to today’s powerful H100 GPU clusters, we have based intelligence on ...
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