The Synchron brain computer interface with Apple Vision Pro.. Photo: Courtesy Company The release quotes Mark enthusing about watching videos in the headset. “It’s like watching it in the theater, it ...
A 64-year-old named Mark has spent the last year learning how to control devices like his laptop and phone using a brain implant. And thanks to OpenAI, it's gotten a whole lot easier to do. The ...
Patients suffering from severe neurological conditions, such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), may now be able to chat with their loved ones again with the help of generative AI. Last week, ...
You can count the Apple Vision Pro and Amazon Alexa-powered smart home devices to a growing list of technology that people can control with their thoughts, thanks to a brain implant called a Stentrode ...
Apple's research into future technology usage has led to an ALS patient controlling an Apple Vision Pro with their mind, using an implant. While Apple products can be controlled by many different ...
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PCMag editors select and review products independently. If you buy through affiliate links, we may earn commissions, which help support our testing. Apple is adding support for brain-computer ...
Synchron, maker of an implantable brain-computer interface, unveiled new demos of how the device could be used to control Amazon Alexa products like the Fire Tablet and Apple's Vision Pro headset.
Slowly but surely, brain-computer control technology is turning from a distant sci-fi pipe dream to real-world, life-changing applications. While most brain-computer interfaces (BCI) call for invasive ...