World's first bioprocessor uses 16 human brain organoids for ‘a million times less power’ consumption than a digital chip
World's first bioprocessor uses 16 human brain organoids for ‘a million times less power’ consumption than a digital chip
Swiss startup claims its Neuroplatform is a first for biocomputing.
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Article claims they are human brain organoids, doesn't say where the source of them is. Are these grown, like most other neural computing systems, or are they actually taking matter from a human brain?
31 1 ReplyOrganoids are largely homogenous lab-grown mini-organs.
37 0 ReplySo is it fair to call them human or is that just sensationalism in the article?
6 0 ReplyThey are neurons derived and grown from human skin cells iirc, so, kinda?
16 0 ReplyIt's because they're human cells, as opposed to being rat cells or something
9 0 Reply
Not only is what I'm hearing.
2 0 ReplyI think the "largely" only refers to the homogeneous part. I hope it does
2 0 Reply
Here’s a video that starts with a good general overview of brain organoids:
9 0 ReplyHere is an alternative Piped link(s):
https://www.piped.video/watch?v=x1Pg56WWm5U
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I'm open-source; check me out at GitHub.
2 0 Reply
pffft good luck getting my brain organoids to do your bidding... I am deeply tarded
4 2 Reply