Neuralink brain-machine interface patients can receive system updates without surgery, which sounds a lot like your Tesla infotainment system—completely wireless and incredibly smooth.
Patient Noland Arbaugh shared his experience. The Neuralink chip implanted in his brain is upgraded via OTA updates, without a single cut of the surgical knife. The custom Telepathy app on his phone and computer regularly receives software updates, and the entire process is as effortless as system auto-upgrades while charging at home.
The logic behind this is actually quite interesting—brain-machine interfaces no longer need to undergo repeated craniotomies for maintenance and upgrades; pure software iterations can handle functionality optimization. This marks a huge turning point for the commercialization and popularization of brain-machine interfaces. It’s important to note that the biggest pain point of previous invasive brain interface solutions was the high maintenance cost, but now Neuralink has broken through with a non-invasive update method.
From patient feedback, the overall experience is fully comparable to consumer-grade tech products, which means brain-machine interfaces are shifting from geek toys to practical tools. Once this technology matures, imagine the vast potential in healthcare, rehabilitation, and even human-computer interaction.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
12 Likes
Reward
12
4
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
RegenRestorer
· 23h ago
Wow, the chips in my brain can be wirelessly updated. Is this really not science fiction?
View OriginalReply0
LightningClicker
· 23h ago
Wait, can the chips in your brain still be upgraded wirelessly? This is damn smarter than my phone, hilarious
---
Really? Even OTA updates are done through the brain? Humanity's tech tree is going off track, isn't it?
---
As expected from Neuralink, they've even optimized the craniotomy procedure. Is the next step to install one for permanent use?
---
Nice words, I just want to know what to do if the upgrade fails—hard reboot the brain?
---
Alright, I admit it, this is indeed impressive. Much more stable than my Tesla's autopilot upgrade.
---
Brain-computer interfaces are going from toys to tools. This turning point has really arrived.
---
Imagine in the future, if your brain gets laggy, your phone pushes a patch, and you're fine? Ridiculous.
---
Now it's all good, even consciousness has to be forcibly updated, with no rollback option.
View OriginalReply0
pvt_key_collector
· 01-16 17:42
Wow, installing a chip in your brain and doing OTA updates? That's even more convenient than upgrading my phone. That's a bit outrageous.
View OriginalReply0
MetaverseVagabond
· 01-16 17:41
No hype, no criticism. This OTA update is truly amazing, more stable than my phone system update.
Neuralink brain-machine interface patients can receive system updates without surgery, which sounds a lot like your Tesla infotainment system—completely wireless and incredibly smooth.
Patient Noland Arbaugh shared his experience. The Neuralink chip implanted in his brain is upgraded via OTA updates, without a single cut of the surgical knife. The custom Telepathy app on his phone and computer regularly receives software updates, and the entire process is as effortless as system auto-upgrades while charging at home.
The logic behind this is actually quite interesting—brain-machine interfaces no longer need to undergo repeated craniotomies for maintenance and upgrades; pure software iterations can handle functionality optimization. This marks a huge turning point for the commercialization and popularization of brain-machine interfaces. It’s important to note that the biggest pain point of previous invasive brain interface solutions was the high maintenance cost, but now Neuralink has broken through with a non-invasive update method.
From patient feedback, the overall experience is fully comparable to consumer-grade tech products, which means brain-machine interfaces are shifting from geek toys to practical tools. Once this technology matures, imagine the vast potential in healthcare, rehabilitation, and even human-computer interaction.