Real-life researchers taught a dish of roughly 200,000 living human brain cells to play the classic 1990s computer game “Doom ...
Two very different types of “computers” dominate the world today. The first is the type you’re likely reading this article on—machines powered by transistors and silicon that make our modern society ...
A hot minute after the world started talking about GPU-powered neural networks, the conversation's quickly changed to neural networks powered by actual neurons. You can now order a literal ...
Cortical Labs says the stunt points toward a new kind of low-power computing—and perhaps a new way to study neurological ...
In a development straight out of science fiction, Australian startup Cortical Labs has released what it calls the world’s first code-deployable biological computer. The CL1, which debuted in March, ...
Cortical Labs, the Australian biotech startup that wired living neurons to a video game, now faces a distinctly biological constraint as it scales its technology: the cells powering its computers need ...
An Australian startup has unveiled the world’s first commercial biological computer that runs on living human brain cells. Melbourne-based Cortical Labs launched the CL1 at Mobile World Congress in ...
A biological computer using human neurons learns Doom within 1 week, highlighting rapid adaptive learning and potential ...
Cortical Labs, a biotech company focused on synthetic intelligence, has revealed the CL1, the world’s first commercial biological computer. The system uses living human neurones grown on silicon chips ...
Biological computing startup Cortical Labs has launched CL1, what it is calling the world’s first commercial biological computer. The technology combines “lab-cultivated neurons from human stem cells” ...
Scientists unveil a revolutionary “living computer” that fuses human flesh with silicon circuits, and it has its own OS that is neither Windows nor Linux. Australian startup Cortical Labs has launched ...