China's Carbon Era: How Beijing Is Betting on Brains and Biology to Win the Compute War
China just approved the world's first commercial invasive BCI. This isn't a research milestone — it's a geopolitical opening move.
China just approved the world's first commercial invasive BCI. This isn't a research milestone — it's a geopolitical opening move.
China just commercialized the world's first invasive BCI. While America runs trials, Beijing is implanting devices in hospitals — and building an entire ecosystem around them.
Writing three specific gratitudes daily for 8 weeks creates measurable structural changes in the brain. This isn't self-help mythology — it's neuroplasticity, and it's the cheapest firmware update your biological computer will ever run.
Epia Neuro launched from stealth in April 2026 with a minimally invasive skull implant and motorized glove designed to restore hand function in stroke survivors — not by replacing the brain, but by retraining it.
Judah Anttila's TEDxOU talk maps the next 20 years of exponential change with rare emotional clarity. But the missing piece in his fractal mind thesis is the substrate — and wetware is already filling that gap.
Kenneth Shock can speak again — not with his mouth, but with his mind. Neuralink's VOICE trial marks a turning point in the story of the human biocomputer.
Before brain-computer interfaces existed, one neurophysiologist mapped the mind as programmable software. A deep dive into John C. Lilly's radical ideas — from Cold War classified research to the first isolation tank — and why they matter more than ever in 2026.
Brain-computer interfaces started as a way to control computers with your mind. Now they are becoming treatments for some of the most devastating neurological conditions we know.
How brain-computer interfaces work, what Neuralink has achieved, and what comes next.