What if you could get your mind to do things you had once thought impossible? How would you feel if it took technology to do it? A debate we have had at our writers group is if the technology existed to enhance you mentally or physically, would you use it?
Many of us agree, the majority of people would. Why? Because it’s human nature to want to be better or even as good as we once were.
As you get older your memory starts to go. No ones fault, it just happens. So imagine if you could make an appointment with your doctor and for a fee have the equivalent of computer memory implanted in your brain. You might find your insurance even covers it. The way they see it, if you always remember to take your medicine, you don’t get sick as often. You have perfect recall and the insurance company gets to collect premiums and not pay out as much.
Or, more painfully, a water skiing accident snaps your spine. You live but your body is no longer functional. You can’t even speak. Would it be some kind of miracle to have the technology available that would read your thoughts and through a computer allow you to communicate, perhaps do even more?
In 1982, Clint Eastwood, starred in and directed a movie called Firefox. The movie was about an American pilot who goes to
That was then.
What is the possibility of a mind/machine interface? I recently watched a video that sent me down a path of wonder. A woman named Tan Le is part of a company that has developed a Mind/Computer interface. (Look her up on Wikipedia and check out her TED Talk.) She demonstrated a simple headset (one that could read brainwaves -- EEG) and some software, that allowed a person to quickly manipulate objects in a virtual environment using just their mind. Imagine for a moment what that could mean. It starts with computer games where you can move objects and characters just using your thoughts. That’s how they introduce it because that will reach around the world and that is where the money is, but that is not the real power of this invention. In my waterskiing tragedy above, that person could communicate and even use a wheel chair just through mental commands and facial movement.
While watching this short video I imagined a myriad of possibilities (both good and bad) that this technology represents. I need to go now and write them down – since I don’t have that perfect recall implant…yet.

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