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7/3/2025, 9:01:37 AM
>>509377200
yeah, my cousin in his mid 40s is still a virgin as well. its weird cause hes 6'3 and has Chaddish looks. nowadays he just post angry rants online and drinks himself stupid. kinda like me but I don't drink.
yeah, my cousin in his mid 40s is still a virgin as well. its weird cause hes 6'3 and has Chaddish looks. nowadays he just post angry rants online and drinks himself stupid. kinda like me but I don't drink.
7/3/2025, 9:01:37 AM
>>22894235
yeah, my cousin in his mid 40s is still a virgin as well. its weird cause hes 6'3 and has Chaddish looks. nowadays he just post angry rants online and drinks himself stupid. kinda like me but I don't drink.
yeah, my cousin in his mid 40s is still a virgin as well. its weird cause hes 6'3 and has Chaddish looks. nowadays he just post angry rants online and drinks himself stupid. kinda like me but I don't drink.
6/28/2025, 1:36:56 PM
it is in PCMagazine because the implant allows oyu to operate Windows 11 mouse cursors and clicks wirelessly, even if you are paralyzed you can operate a computer which is great, might even post on 4chan
https://www.pcmag.com/news/7-people-now-have-elon-musks-neuralink-brain-implant
In a February 2025 update, Neuralink confirmed that three people had received its brain-computer interface (BCI). That increased to five by June, when it also reported a 568 million euro funding round (it is 666 million USD). We're now at seven, Barrow tweeted today; Neuralink retweeted that message.
Six of the seven are participating in the PRIME study, conducted by Barrow, which handles the implantations from its Phoenix, Arizona, office. It aims to prove that the N1 implant, the R1 surgical robot, and the N1 User App on the computer are
>safe and effective, according to the program brochure.
Participants in the study get the implant through a surgery in which a custom-built robotic arm drills a hole in their skull and implants the device. The implant connects to a computer via Bluetooth, allowing patients to move the cursor, select words to type, browse the web, and even play video games -- a favorite activity of Neuralink's first human patient, Noland Arbaugh, who can do this all without moving any limbs or fingers. Arbaugh, now 33, became paralyzed during a diving accident. He hit his head on a rock.
Mike is the fourth patient, and "the first person with a full-time job to use the N1 Implant," Barrow says. "He worked as a survey technician for city government and spent the majority of his time in the field until his ALS made the work too difficult. Like Alex, Mike has used CAD software with his Neuralink device to continue doing survey work from home and provide for his family."
Do YOU want a brain implant? It's free.
(here's how to apply).
http://neuralink.com/patient-registry
https://www.pcmag.com/news/7-people-now-have-elon-musks-neuralink-brain-implant
In a February 2025 update, Neuralink confirmed that three people had received its brain-computer interface (BCI). That increased to five by June, when it also reported a 568 million euro funding round (it is 666 million USD). We're now at seven, Barrow tweeted today; Neuralink retweeted that message.
Six of the seven are participating in the PRIME study, conducted by Barrow, which handles the implantations from its Phoenix, Arizona, office. It aims to prove that the N1 implant, the R1 surgical robot, and the N1 User App on the computer are
>safe and effective, according to the program brochure.
Participants in the study get the implant through a surgery in which a custom-built robotic arm drills a hole in their skull and implants the device. The implant connects to a computer via Bluetooth, allowing patients to move the cursor, select words to type, browse the web, and even play video games -- a favorite activity of Neuralink's first human patient, Noland Arbaugh, who can do this all without moving any limbs or fingers. Arbaugh, now 33, became paralyzed during a diving accident. He hit his head on a rock.
Mike is the fourth patient, and "the first person with a full-time job to use the N1 Implant," Barrow says. "He worked as a survey technician for city government and spent the majority of his time in the field until his ALS made the work too difficult. Like Alex, Mike has used CAD software with his Neuralink device to continue doing survey work from home and provide for his family."
Do YOU want a brain implant? It's free.
(here's how to apply).
http://neuralink.com/patient-registry
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