In about 50 years, a British researcher thinks we will be able to cheat the Grim Reaper and keep part of ourselves alive. The sky was the color of television, tuned to a dead channel. That is the opening to the seminal 1984 novel by author William Gibson repeated the word 'cyberspace,' first used in his short story collection "Burning Chrome." It's a term used and overused many times since the development of the World Wide Web. For legions of wanna-be cyberpunks and technophiles, "Neuromancer" described a new frontier. A console cowboy could jack-in to cyberspace, make his way among the strata of data structures representing real-world constructs, and if he had the talent and the guts he could pull off thefts that make Ocean's 11 look like a convenience store heist. And in cyberspace, a person could live, in a sense. It's the dream of geeks, living beyond the physical, where your brain is important and intellect is strength. For British Telecom futurologist Ian Pearson, that future could be 50 years away. According to an Observer interview, he sees a point where the human brain could be downloaded to a computer. "(W)hen you die it's not a major career problem," said Mr. Pearson. He cites the development of the PlayStation 3, with its Cell processor technology, that is 1% as powerful as the human brain. At the rate of development seen today, the capability for the very wealthy to be neatly digitized would arrive around 2050, and the technology commoditized where more people could afford it 25 or 30 years later. Press 0 To Speak With A Virtual Human Mr. Pearson sees some mundane uses for the technology, such as intelligent phone systems that "converse" with callers instead of playing the usual "press 1 for tech support" options. Whether someone would want to spend eternity as a virtual operator is another question. But Mr. Pearson doesn't go in the other direction, which would be uploading from a computer to a human body. Imagine a scenario where death is merely a rest break between bodies. Author Richard K Morgan touched upon that topic in his novel "here
This Is Your Brain On Chips
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