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How do you feel about biocomputers?

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I recently came across a question on this website, are you afraid that AI will take away your work. And many people were sure that it would not be possible to develop the same AI as the human brain. Well then, here's the news for you:

A breakthrough in computing: Cortical Labs' CL1 is the first living biocomputer and costs almost the same as 'Apple's best failure'

The technology lets you interact with real neurons, grown across a silicon chip.

* Cortical Labs has built the first deployable biological computer, priced at $35,000

* The CL1 integrates living neurons with silicon for real-time computation

* The next step will be to build a biological neural network server stack


Despite the unquestionably impressive advancements we’ve witnessed in recent years, AI is still lagging far behind human intelligence. While it can process vast amounts of data, recognize patterns, and generate responses at speed, it lacks true understanding and reasoning, and although it’s getting better, the issue of hallucinations - when the AI makes stuff up - remains a problem.

Two years ago, researchers from Johns Hopkins University in Australia, together with scientists at Cortical Labs in Melbourne, suggested that the answer to real, less artificial AI was organoids - computers built with human brain cells. Fast forward to today, and Cortical Labs has turned the theory into reality with the production of the world’s first commercialized biological computer.

The CL1, which will be manufactured to order but is available for purchase online (the option to buy time on the chips will also be offered), is a Synthetic Biological Intelligence (SBI).

Connecting directly to neurons

“Real neurons are cultivated inside a nutrient-rich solution, supplying them with everything they need to be healthy. They grow across a silicon chip, which sends and receives electrical impulses into the neural structure," the company says.

The world the neurons exist in is created by Cortical Labs’ Biological Intelligence Operating System (biOS) and “runs a simulated world and sends information directly to the neurons about their environment. As the neurons react, their impulses affect their simulated world. We bring these neurons to life, and integrate them into the biOS with a mixture of hard silicon and soft tissue. You get to connect directly to these neurons.”

By deploying code directly to the real neurons, the company claims the CL1 can solve today’s most difficult challenges, “The neuron is self-programming, infinitely flexible, and the result of four billion years of evolution. What digital AI models spend tremendous resources trying to emulate, we begin with.”

"Today is the culmination of a vision that has powered Cortical Labs for almost six years," noted Dr. Hon Weng Chong, Founder and CEO of Cortical Labs. "However, our long-term mission has been to democratize this technology, making it accessible to researchers without specialized hardware and software. The CL1 is the realization of that mission. While today's announcement is incredibly exciting, it's the foundation for the next stage of innovation. The real impact and the real implications will come from every researcher, academic, or innovator that builds on top of it."

A report from New Atlas claims Cortical is constructing a “first-of-its-kind biological neural network server stack, housing 30 individual units that each contain the cells on their electrode array, which is expected to go online in the coming months.” The site reports the company is aiming to have four stacks available for commercial use via a cloud system by the end of 2025.

As for pricing, the CL1 will be surprisingly affordable. “The units themselves are expected to have a price tag of around US$35,000, to start with (anything close to this kind of tech is currently priced at €80,000, or nearly US$85,000),” New Atlas adds.

For context, Apple’s “best failure” the Lisa, which paved the way for the Macintosh and even Microsoft Windows, sold for $9,995.00 in January 1983 which, adjusting for inflation, works out to a comparable $32,500 today. Will the CL1 prove be as important to computing’s future as the Lisa was? It's impossible to say, but for now its impact will largely depend on scalability, practical applications, and how well it integrates into existing AI and computing systems.

Source:


If you don't believe that Artificial intelligence can replace you, then what about Actual Intelligence combined together into a server or "Hive Mind"?
 
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Technically, humans ARE biocomputers. We might be able to emulate human biology with lab grown parts to create a faster computer, but if you think you'll give it "life", I don't know that it will truly happen, and I'm not sure it should. And, whatever you do, don't name it HAL. ;)
 
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If you don't believe that Artificial intelligence can replace you, then what about Actual Intelligence combined together into a server or "Hive Mind"?
Tell me when AI will be able to do a simple task like walking up or down 2 flights of stairs carrying a bucket full of water and opening doors?
 
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Tell me when AI will be able to do a simple task like walking up or down 2 flights of stairs carrying a bucket full of water and opening doors?
But they've already done it. The door can be opened by a dog from Boston Dynamics. Last year, Boston Dynamics demonstrated bag-carrying tasks with its old version of a humanoid robot. The new version is already putting things on the shelves. Humanoid robots from Agility Robotics are already working at the factory, carrying loads. And there they don't even use this new biological intelligence.
 
Aren't bio computers inherently slow since they cannot operate at the speed of light? In the Three Body Problem they used bio computers to get around the lock on the speed of light inside dark zones. Only thing I can think of where they might be of some use is as abstract thinking machines. Human perception is rather poor, so our brains filter and add information to fill in the blanks much of the time. If we could bio-engineer a way around rejection, they could be of real use.
 
Tell me when AI will be able to do a simple task like walking up or down 2 flights of stairs carrying a bucket full of water and opening doors?
I’m sure we’re looking at this differently, but I already consider those things machines can do, machanical doors and conveyor belts do those functions, I don’t see why they couldn’t just add an AI program that could help identify jams or trouble shoot errors.
 
One issue I see with this biocomputer situation is that I’d assume you would need to feed the organic cells, and that huminzes pcs too much in my opinion
 
But they've already done it. The door can be opened by a dog from Boston Dynamics. Last year, Boston Dynamics demonstrated bag-carrying tasks with its old version of a humanoid robot. The new version is already putting things on the shelves. Humanoid robots from Agility Robotics are already working at the factory, carrying loads. And there they don't even use this new biological intelligence.
Can they clean sofas and mattresses?
Can they tell the difference between a leather sofa and a cloth one?
Can they tell if a sofa has removable cushions?
Can they operate, fill, clean and empty an upholstery machine?
Can they use extension leads?
How long would it take for one of them to clean 15 sofas on a shop floor, including having to move the sofas around so they get full cleaning coverage, plus avoiding getting in the way of customers at the same time? BTW it takes me around 6 hours total to clean 15 sofas and do the machine.
Will they be able to do that within the next 10 years? I have less than 10 years before I retire.;)

 
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Tell me when AI will be able to do a simple task like walking up or down 2 flights of stairs carrying a bucket full of water and opening doors?
They are. The agility of current robots is amazing. There was a huge leap in their capabilities since the break-through in AI. Dog-robots can now walk and run on two legs, and androids can do all sorts of amazing things. Just visit a military drone exhibition and be amazed what is possible! (not yet affordable for normal means, but possible)
 
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I think they're pretty neat, though the downside is uhh the whole making all humanity turn into mutants. Kinda broke the deal for me
 

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Can they clean sofas and mattresses?
Can they tell the difference between a leather sofa and a cloth one?
Can they tell if a sofa has removable cushions?
Can they operate, fill, clean and empty an upholstery machine?
Can they use extension leads?
How long would it take for one of them to clean 15 sofas on a shop floor, including having to move the sofas around so they get full cleaning coverage, plus avoiding getting in the way of customers at the same time? BTW it takes me around 6 hours total to clean 15 sofas and do the machine.
Will they be able to do that within the next 10 years? I have less than 10 years before I retire.;)

I am not Elon Musk, so I will not make loud promises that they will be able to do this all within 10 years. But I dream about it myself. Moreover, I dream of robots made of meat like West World or Fallout 4. For sex, of course :-) But it's not for me to realize it, but for them, we just have to wait.
 
I am not Elon Musk, so I will not make loud promises that they will be able to do this all within 10 years. But I dream about it myself. Moreover, I dream of robots made of meat like West World or Fallout 4. For sex, of course :) But it's not for me to realize it, but for them, we just have to wait.

Probably somewhere in Japan they are already testing a technology similar to this in a sex doll.
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The only interest of points on LC. Having metaphysical discussions in a porn forum. Reminds me of when we used to read articles on playboy. Yeah, I'm old.
 
Considering our brains are basically bio-computers I'm a big fan of them :D
 
Since we only understand a fraction of the inner workings of human cells, an usable bio-computer is still a long way off.
 
only a time till your computer goes down because it has a cold
 
my feelings about biocomputers depend entirely on it's ability to improve my gooning efficiency
 
My question would be; whose neurons are they using? That is the part that would freak me out. If the neurons were derived from entirely artificial DNA; then I would look at it differently.
 
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