flickeringmuse:

The Laws of Robotics

1. A robot may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.

2. A robot must obey the orders given to it by human beings, except where such orders would conflict with the First Law.

3. A robot must protect its own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Laws.

Reblogged from CWL

the-absolute-funniest-posts:

thefrogman:

Sheldon, the tiny dinosaur that thinks he’s a turtle
by Amber [tumblr | deviantart]

Reblogged from Vodkacupcakes
cucuqui:

soyuncacahuated1:

barquitadepapel:

DE ALGO ESTOY SEGURA, LOS MAS POBRES SON LOS MAS RICOS DE CORAZÓN 

ohhh wn qe hermoso *-*

Esta foto me llego )):

cucuqui:

soyuncacahuated1:

barquitadepapel:

DE ALGO ESTOY SEGURA, LOS MAS POBRES SON LOS MAS RICOS DE CORAZÓN 

ohhh wn qe hermoso *-*

Esta foto me llego )):

Reblogged from Leidy Mar BS♥
perscientiamlibertas:


neurosciencestuff:

Brain implants: Restoring memory with a microchip
William Gibson’s popular science fiction tale “Johnny Mnemonic” foresaw sensitive information being carried by microchips in the brain by 2021. A team of American neuroscientists could be making this fantasy world a reality.
Their motivation is different but the outcome would be somewhat similar. Hailed as one of 2013’s top ten technological breakthroughs by MIT, the work by the University of Southern California, North Carolina’s Wake Forest University and other partners has actually spanned a decade.
But the U.S.-wide team now thinks that it will see a memory device being implanted in a small number of human volunteers within two years and available to patients in five to 10 years. They can’t quite contain their excitement.
“I never thought I’d see this in my lifetime,” said Ted Berger, professor of biomedical engineering at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles. “I might not benefit from it myself but my kids will.”

Read More

perscientiamlibertas:

neurosciencestuff:

Brain implants: Restoring memory with a microchip

William Gibson’s popular science fiction tale “Johnny Mnemonic” foresaw sensitive information being carried by microchips in the brain by 2021. A team of American neuroscientists could be making this fantasy world a reality.

Their motivation is different but the outcome would be somewhat similar. Hailed as one of 2013’s top ten technological breakthroughs by MIT, the work by the University of Southern California, North Carolina’s Wake Forest University and other partners has actually spanned a decade.

But the U.S.-wide team now thinks that it will see a memory device being implanted in a small number of human volunteers within two years and available to patients in five to 10 years. They can’t quite contain their excitement.

“I never thought I’d see this in my lifetime,” said Ted Berger, professor of biomedical engineering at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles. “I might not benefit from it myself but my kids will.”

Read More

Reblogged from Scinerds
amazed:

♡ Personal blog, following back tons ♡

amazed:

♡ Personal blog, following back tons ♡

Reblogged from Cloudley
Reblogged from Cloudley