I’m not thrilled about your vagueness about what technologies count as a BCI. Little electrodes? The gaming device that came out last year or so got a lot of hype, but the gamers I’ve talked to who have actually used it were all deeply unimpressed. Voice recognition? Already here in niches, but not really popular.
If you can’t think of what interfaces specifically*, then maybe you should phrase your prediction as a negative: ‘by 2020, >50% of the smart cellphone market will use a non-gestural non-keyboard based interface’ etc.
* and you really should be able to—just 9 years means that any possible tech has to have already been demonstrated in the lab and have a feasible route to commercialization; R&D isn’t that fast a process, and neither is being good & cheap enough to take over the global market to the point of ‘pervasive’
Yep, electrodes, as in the gaming devices. Headsets is the form factor I have in mind, so not necessarily electrodes if this is to be believed. I don’t want to commit to burdensome implementation details but voice isn’t what I mean—it doesn’t count as “unobtrusive” to my way of thinking.
I envision something where I can just form the thought “nearest MacDonalds” (ETA: or somehow bring up a menu selecting that among even a restricted set) without it being conspicuous for an outside observer, and get some form of feedback from the device leading me in the right direction. Visual overlay would work, but so would a physical tug.
I’m not thrilled about your vagueness about what technologies count as a BCI. Little electrodes? The gaming device that came out last year or so got a lot of hype, but the gamers I’ve talked to who have actually used it were all deeply unimpressed. Voice recognition? Already here in niches, but not really popular.
If you can’t think of what interfaces specifically*, then maybe you should phrase your prediction as a negative: ‘by 2020, >50% of the smart cellphone market will use a non-gestural non-keyboard based interface’ etc.
* and you really should be able to—just 9 years means that any possible tech has to have already been demonstrated in the lab and have a feasible route to commercialization; R&D isn’t that fast a process, and neither is being good & cheap enough to take over the global market to the point of ‘pervasive’
Decoding spoken words using local field potentials recorded from the cortical surface
Yep, electrodes, as in the gaming devices. Headsets is the form factor I have in mind, so not necessarily electrodes if this is to be believed. I don’t want to commit to burdensome implementation details but voice isn’t what I mean—it doesn’t count as “unobtrusive” to my way of thinking.
I envision something where I can just form the thought “nearest MacDonalds” (ETA: or somehow bring up a menu selecting that among even a restricted set) without it being conspicuous for an outside observer, and get some form of feedback from the device leading me in the right direction. Visual overlay would work, but so would a physical tug.