How many brain cells does it take to play a game of Doom?
AI is driving a surge in electricity demand, forcing governments and technology companies to search for more efficient computing systems Read more at The Business Times.
Biological computing startup Cortical Labs has announced the launch of what it touts as the world’s first data centre that uses human brain cells on a silicon chip rather than computer chips.
A clump of living human brain cells wired into a silicon chip has answered the internet's most important computing question: yes, it can run Doom.
In a groundbreaking experiment, researchers have achieved a remarkable feat that blurs the lines between biology and technology. Cortical Labs has cultivated 800K brain cells in a petri dish, ...
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 ...
A biocomputer powered by lab-grown human brain cells has leveled up from Pong to Doom. While nowhere ready to handle the video game shooter’s most challenging levels, researchers at Cortical Labs in ...
Living human neurons were trained to play Doom, extending the long-running engineering benchmark into biological computing.
The CL1 is the first commercial system from the same researchers who wowed the tech world in 2022 by teaching a cluster of ...
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 ...
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” ...
Biotech startup Cortical Labs is working on two small data centers run by human brain cells, putting lab-grown neurons onto silicon in an experiment that could one day challenge chips from the likes ...