Of course, once I start thinking about brain-computer interface (BCI) it starts popping up everywhere.
Joel Garreau writes about toys controlled by the mind for the Washington Post.
“Steve Koenig, director of industry analysis at the Consumer Electronics Association, has little doubt about the high-end, professional possibilities of the mind-over-matter market. He sees the opportunities for military robot wrangling, say, or mastering space or undersea exploration, or allowing the profoundly ill or disabled to control their surroundings.
“He is, however, a skeptic about how eagerly we will embrace the toys.”
Koenig echoes the point I was making the other day that got me started on this BCI tangent.
















