Thursday, May 3, 2012

Of Biocoms and Siri Clones

 I'm actually amazed just how quickly it is all coming when I wrote about "Biocom" which is a sentient human embeded computer that lives off the electricity of a human body and works 24 hours a day to keep you informed and can talk to you it was still the mid 1980s. Little did I know that Stephen Jobs would come up with SIRI as the ideal interface between all computer languages and systems before he died and market it. Now, my son's android has an app that is almost as good as Siri and even now I'm hearing a lot of people are having trouble with Siri. The problem of programs like SIRI is that they burn up so much bandwidth. However, as time goes on this will become less of a problem as programs become more refined. The reason now it takes so much bandwidth is that it has to deal with so many different programming platforms and then it has to be a good speech synthesizer too. And it has to learn to recognize words in English (or any other language) with multiple dialects and even speech impediments which is a lot to ask of anyone let alone a speech recognition software in your smartphone. Here is a segment of what I wrote about a "Biocom" installed in Arcane a Galactic Government Authorized Time Traveler and a member of the Galactic Time Guard.


The automatic thought scanner of my friendly sentient biocom tells me she has been tampered with by beings that are unfriendly aliens. But the cultural norm of this present day culture apparently doubts that aliens even exist in real time on earth. Boy! Have they got a lot to learn?

***Note a biocomputer is a micro-micro sentient computer built into the left ear lobe and into a spot just outside the left corner of the mouth and into a little area atop the head. Each of these three interfaced units is both thought and voice activated and undetectable to the present technology of 1987. There is also deep memory storage of one billion terabytes in the fillings of my lower molars. Through earth satellite relay I can within ten seconds retrieve Earth information from any files on earth or any information I am permitted to access in this Galaxy from any known time or space. I can instantly communicate by thought or word to Galactic Central Timekeepers in emergencies. This can be done in 4 or 5 basic ways consciously or by about 50 different unconscious ways, which automatically generate when consciousness is absent or altered in any way. All my vital signs and all DNA based life forms around me within 100 yards are also monitored for potential threats or dangers.

*** Note 2: Contrary to popular belief the best place to manifest and disappear in time travel is in public. Over 50 people in a football field size area is an earth traveling rule for my group of timekeepers. Our biocoms can change the motivations and thoughts in those around us when we manifest or disappear within 1/100th of a second when necessary. Since our biocoms monitor all life around us they do this automatically.

Arcane thinks, "This woman feels very familiar. Do I know her from Time School?"

Also, since it is my experience as an intuitive and on every level that situations somewhat similar to what we find in Men In Black actually do exist on earth. I think that this sort of thing is kept secret because less than 1% of the human race could actually deal with all of it. So, even though larger nations likely have diplomatic relations with many dimensional and physical worlds beyond our own, at least 75% of the human race would run amok and destroy human civilization in various ways if they found out about it. For example, Just look at how beings like Osama Bin Laden are freaking out now just because of technology and people other than Muslims being on Earth. Just imagine how crazy it could get if people suddenly were told about 1000s of other worlds that our governments have contact with? So, you can see that hardly anyone is capable of dealing with the truth at least  within large groups of humanity.


The next step Intel is working on right now. However, for me the problem is do I trust anyone installing anything in my brain? In the end it is all about trust and if that trust is well placed or just crazy. Even now, no one on earth can trust big companies like Google or Facebook to protect all their passwords or finances from harm. How much worse would it be with subliminal manipulation directly by a company to convert someone into a literal biological robot by altering their subconscious at a motivational level? At that point freedom as we know it would no longer be possible for anyone thus manipulated. So, definitely we are entering  a "Brave New World".

Here is Intel's article:
 

Intel wants to plug a smartphone into your brain

@CNNMoneyTech May 3, 2012: 1:20 PM ET
brain-smartphone.jc.top.jpg
NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- Show off a new gadget to your friends or family and inevitably one person in the group will declare, "Soon they'll just plug these things directly into your brain!" And everyone will laugh, as if they've never heard that joke before.
It's no joke.
An Intel-commissioned white paper released Wednesday on the future of mobile technology concludes that connected devices interfacing with the human brain is an inevitability.
Here's how the paper's authors, from consultancy Booz Allen Hamilton, put it: "As convergence continues across device types, functions, and capabilities, the melding of mobile technologies directly into the human body becomes the logical next step."
They add: "By harnessing the processing power and capabilities of mobile devices, for example, our biological brain will be augmented exponentially by a digital counterpart."
Don't expect to plug your iPhone directly into your cranium in the next few years. There's a few remaining steps on the path toward turning us all into cyborgs.
First, "form factors" need to die. If you can do it on your computer at work, you should be able to do the exact same thing on your smartphone, or even your glasses.
Processor speeds need to continue rising, and computers need to improve their natural-language support so we can interact with our devices like we would with another human being. Also, security has to advance so that devices can recognize their owners, eliminating the need for passwords.
It sounds like far-off sci-fi stuff, but all of those evolutions are in the works today.
Microsoft (MSFT, Fortune 500) is starting to show progress on its vision of one converged operating system for all devices. IBM (IBM, Fortune 500) is making incredible strides in its Watson technology that can "understand" natural human language. Google's (GOOG, Fortune 500) latest Android phones can recognize their owners' faces to unlock their devices, and both Google and Microsoft are working on wearable computer displays.
So that's step one: a lag-free operating system that anyone can use intuitively to perform any computing task.
Step two: Interfacing with the body. These kinds of interfaces are already operating in a relatively rudimentary way, with implants and pacemakers. But in its paper, Intel suggests that the link-up will be much more robust.
How robust? Well, have you seen The Matrix?
"With thoughts able to be delivered seamlessly to the cloud and data projected in real time onto our vision ... our bodies and minds will become the devices with all of the associated benefits," the paper's authors write.
You'll literally be "plugged-in" to the cloud, so your brain will have access to all the information on the Internet. You'll never again forget a name or miss a meeting. You won't have to get a routine check-up from a doctor, either, since your gadgets will monitor your vital signs and test your blood for you.
Of course, for every wonderful benefit, there's an equally scary potential consequence.
Think about all the privacy issues we have today with sites like Facebook. Now imagine giving people the capability to record everything they see and hear and immediately post it to the Internet. The human race could turn into something like Star Trek's Borg, who can access the entire network and literally knew everyone's thoughts.
Plus, how would exam-taking work? If people begin to rely on their connectedness like a crutch, can it just be turned off or wiped out for security purposes?
We'd better be prepared to answer these questions, because Intel (INTC, Fortune 500) says it's coming soon, whether we like it or not.
"While the future is never certain, a future where humans are infused with mobile technology where we are part of the device, our own bodies and brains part of the technology, and where there are no barriers to pure capability, is becoming more believable by the day," Intel's paper concludes. To top of page
End quote from:
http://money.cnn.com/2012/05/03/technology/smartphone-in-your-brain/?google_editors_picks=true

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Intel wants to plug a smartphone into your brain

@CNNMoneyTech May 3, 2012: 1:20 PM ET
brain-smartphone.jc.top.jpg
NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- Show off a new gadget to your friends or family and inevitably one person in the group will declare, "Soon they'll just plug these things directly into your brain!" And everyone will laugh, as if they've never heard that joke before.
It's no joke.
An Intel-commissioned white paper released Wednesday on the future of mobile technology concludes that connected devices interfacing with the human brain is an inevitability.
Here's how the paper's authors, from consultancy Booz Allen Hamilton, put it: "As convergence continues across device types, functions, and capabilities, the melding of mobile technologies directly into the human body becomes the logical next step."
They add: "By harnessing the processing power and capabilities of mobile devices, for example, our biological brain will be augmented exponentially by a digital counterpart."
Don't expect to plug your iPhone directly into your cranium in the next few years. There's a few remaining steps on the path toward turning us all into cyborgs.
First, "form factors" need to die. If you can do it on your computer at work, you should be able to do the exact same thing on your smartphone, or even your glasses.
Processor speeds need to continue rising, and computers need to improve their natural-language support so we can interact with our devices like we would with another human being. Also, security has to advance so that devices can recognize their owners, eliminating the need for passwords.
It sounds like far-off sci-fi stuff, but all of those evolutions are in the works today.
Microsoft (MSFT, Fortune 500) is starting to show progress on its vision of one converged operating system for all devices. IBM (IBM, Fortune 500) is making incredible strides in its Watson technology that can "understand" natural human language. Google's (GOOG, Fortune 500) latest Android phones can recognize their owners' faces to unlock their devices, and both Google and Microsoft are working on wearable computer displays.
So that's step one: a lag-free operating system that anyone can use intuitively to perform any computing task.
Step two: Interfacing with the body. These kinds of interfaces are already operating in a relatively rudimentary way, with implants and pacemakers. But in its paper, Intel suggests that the link-up will be much more robust.
How robust? Well, have you seen The Matrix?
"With thoughts able to be delivered seamlessly to the cloud and data projected in real time onto our vision ... our bodies and minds will become the devices with all of the associated benefits," the paper's authors write.
You'll literally be "plugged-in" to the cloud, so your brain will have access to all the information on the Internet. You'll never again forget a name or miss a meeting. You won't have to get a routine check-up from a doctor, either, since your gadgets will monitor your vital signs and test your blood for you.
Of course, for every wonderful benefit, there's an equally scary potential consequence.
Think about all the privacy issues we have today with sites like Facebook. Now imagine giving people the capability to record everything they see and hear and immediately post it to the Internet. The human race could turn into something like Star Trek's Borg, who can access the entire network and literally knew everyone's thoughts.
Plus, how would exam-taking work? If people begin to rely on their connectedness like a crutch, can it just be turned off or wiped out for security purposes?
We'd better be prepared to answer these questions, because Intel (INTC, Fortune 500) says it's coming soon, whether we like it or not.
"While the future is never certain, a future where humans are infused with mobile technology where we are part of the device, our own bodies and brains part of the technology, and where there are no barriers to pure capability, is becoming more believable by the day," Intel's paper concludes. To top of page

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