Curious Fixation: An Infinite Runner Mac OS

Note: I’m going to turn this into a page and keep working on it. This is the draft; since it’s been sitting in the WordPress drafts for over a year, I thought I should do something with it… What makes a movie nerdy? Comic books, hacking, robotics, fantasy and straight-up-nerdiness. There are a lot of movies that really hit on some of these topics. Some do it well and others do a terrible job. Everyone is going to have their favorites, but I wanted to share mine well in advance of Memorial Day if only to help you prep to stay indoors and get just a little more pasty than you got this winter. Given the subjective nature of the nerdy factor, I’ve chosen not to rate these in any particular order. Instead I’m grouping them by sub-nerdy-genre. Hope you enjoy! Nerds Make Good

Search the world's information, including webpages, images, videos and more. Google has many special features to help you find exactly what you're looking for. Aug 11, 2020 The Half-Glass Gaming crew was having a chat about Spider-Man the other day, which left me wondering just how many Spider-Man video games there are. The answer is a lot. So I made a complete list of every Spider-Man game ever made, starting with the 1982 Atari 2600 game. Mac Minimum Requirements. Intel Core 2 Duo Processor 2.1GHz or higher; 4GB RAM; Mac OS X 10.5 or later; 7200 RPM or faster (non energy saving) hard drive for sample streaming; 310GB free hard drive space / iLok Security Key (not supplied) PC Minimum Requirements. Intel Core 2 Duo or AMD Dual Core 2.1GHz or higher; 4GB RAM; Windows XP SP2, Vista.

  • Revenge of the Nerds: Really, this is one of those movies that started it all and belongs at the top of the list.
  • The 40-Year Old Virgin: Almost didn’t put this on the list ’cause I couldn’t figure out if they were making too much fun of… Whatever, it’s hilarious…
  • Jon Dies at the End: Meat monsters, boys who get girls, alternative universes and a surprise ending where Jon dies… Go figure. Or does he…
  • Napoleon Dynamite: Instant classic. No description needed.
  • American Splendor: Underground comic books, girls, the 70s.
  • Fanboys: Star Wars, Trekkies, a girl. Srsly.
  • Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back: This movie should have been called Kevin Smith gets back at Hollywood for making him rich as hell. Pobresito.
  • Chasing Amy: You’re probably gonna’ see most Kevin Smith movies somewhere on the list. This one is a boy gets girl flick with a twist. I’m a sucker for those. Don’t tell anyone…
  • 21: This made the list because… It’s true. Get good at maths, go to Vegas, get wealthy, get a big head, get a beat down.
  • Pi: OK, so he doesn’t make good really because he drills out part of his brain. But he does end up being all Zen, looking at the leaves blowing, finding peace and not dying like the other guy.
  • Can’t Buy Me Love: Nerdy kid pays girl to date him, things go south, kid ends up with girl. Apparently if you tight roll your khakis Amanda Peterson (you know, from Silver Spoons and Annie) will fall all over you. Noted.
  • Love Potion Number 9: Sandra Bullock goes from nerdy chemist to socialite. Seems like I’ve seen that plot since…
Nerdy Fantasy Movies
  • Harry Potter
  • Highlander
  • The Princess Bride
  • Willow
  • The Labrynth
  • Lord of the Rings
  • The Hobbit
  • Stardust
  • Clash of the Titans
  • Wrath of the Titans
  • In the Name of the King: A Dungeon Siege Tale
Nerd Comedy
  • Monty Python and the Holy Grail
  • Spaceballs
  • Galaxy Quest
  • Frequently Asked Questions About Time Travel
  • This is the End
  • The Green Hornet: Seth Rogen, Kato, a car that shoots missiles.
  • Superbad: There almost needs to be a new genre called Nerd Comedy with Seth Rogen in it.
Nerdy Documentaries
  • Nerdcore Rising
  • The Internet’s Own Boy: The Story of Aaron Swartz
  • To Be Takei
  • Web Junkie
  • The Manhattan Project
Comic Book Movies
  • X-men
  • Comic Con Episode IV: A Fan’s Hope
  • Paul
  • Batman
  • Superman
  • Captain America
  • Thor
  • Iron Man
  • Guardians of the Galaxy
  • The Hulk
  • Spiderman
  • Sin City
  • Constantine
  • Elektra
  • Ghost Rider
  • Ghost World
  • Green Lantern
  • Hellboy
  • I, Frankenstein
  • Jonah Hex
  • Judge Dredd
  • Blade
  • Catwoman
  • Daredevil
  • The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen
  • Mystery Men
  • Punisher
  • R.I.P.D.
  • The Rocketeer
  • The Spirit
  • V for Vendetta
  • Watchmen
  • Steel
  • 300
  • Alien vs. Predator
  • The Avengers
  • Wanted
  • Swamp Thing
  • Steel
Science Fiction
  • Star Wars
  • Star Trek
  • Metropolis
  • Avatar
  • Hunger Games
  • Brazil
  • Serenity
  • Dune
  • Beyond Thunderdome
  • Alien
  • Cowboys and Aliens
  • Soylent Green
  • Equilibrium
  • Divergent
  • 2001 A Space Odyssey
  • Planet of the Apes
  • Vanilla Sky
  • War of the Worlds
  • Oblivion
  • Gattaca
  • Stargate
  • Solaris
  • Donnie Darko
  • Tank Girl
  • Timecop
  • Idiocracy
  • Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy
  • Strange Days
  • Limitless
  • Forbidden Planet
  • The Fly
  • The Fifth Element
  • Starship Troopers
  • John Carter
  • Iron Sky: Nazis on the moon. No huge names. Not awful given that.
  • Cube: A movie based on a bunch of rooms making an infinite maze of sorts that keeps changing? Math and a last ginger standing kind of pace.
Nerdy Kids Movies
  • The Last Airbender: I watched all the cartoons with my daughter and so when the movie came out I wanted to take her. Let me be clear, this is not a movie made for 4 year olds. But it was really well done I thought. Obviously, directors have to take some liberties when adopting a dozen hours worth of cartoon story line into a feature film, but I thought it was totally worth it. Too bad they didn’t finish the trilogy.
  • Flight of the Navigator: So bad it’s good. David pilots alien ships and disappears for 8 years without growing a day older. Great little flick that reminds me how I dressed when I was that age. Some of the graphics didn’t hold up, but I’m not so overly judgmental.
  • Kick-Ass: Not many movies are original. This one was. It was fun, campy and I didn’t want to throw up when I saw Big Daddy like I usually do in movies he’s in!
  • Kick-Ass 2: Rarely is a sequel as good as the first movie. This is no exception. But it was original and campy, much like the first and well, well worth the watch.
  • Super 8: Normally I don’t like kids in creepy movies, but they pulled this one off pretty well. Not for younger kids for sure!
  • Goonies: Ah, the originals make ya’ swoon don’t they. What more could you want, than a big bad guy, Corey Feldman, Josh Brolin, Sean Astin, Martha Plimpton and the list goes on. Pirates, booby traps, gold and who could forget Data!
  • Back to the Future: I’m just going to include the whole franchise here. I’m still after a Delorean. Michael J Fox at his best. Well, Teenwolf wasn’t so bad, either. But the Doc, the plutonium and changing the future from the past. Awesome!
  • Hugo: A crossover between nerdy kids and fantasy, this period flick feels more like a steampunk movie than the traditional Disney kids movie (Disney didn’t make it). It’s a good movie. Cinematography, story line, acting, directing, etc. Didn’t get nearly enough attention and I think it will stand the test of time unlike many kids movies.
  • Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
  • Attack the Block
  • Cloak & Dagger
Animated
  • Pretty much every anime movie ever. But Akira really stands out as being the
  • Wreck-It Ralph
  • The Lego Movie
  • The original Lord of the Rings
  • The original Hobbit
  • Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within
Nerdy Robots
  • I, Robot
  • Robocop
  • Transformers
  • Bicentennial Man
  • Short Circuit
  • Wall-E
  • A.I. Artificial Intelligence
  • Terminator
  • Blade Runner because even nerds dream of electric sheep
  • Real Steel:
Zombies, Nerdy Monsters, Werewolves & Vampires
  • Zombieland
  • Army of Darkness
  • Shaun of the Dead
  • Men in Black
  • Mars Attacks!
Video Games
  • Scott Pilgrim vs. The World
  • Tron
  • Lara Croft: Tomb Raider: This movie made a lot of money. It’s made over a quarter of a billion dollars. It also set a new record upon release for movies with a female protagonist. But the only reason it didn’t win worst acres was that Mariah Carey released Glitter that year. It did well enough in the box office though to score a sequel.
  • Power Glove
  • Electric Dreams
  • The Prince of Persia
  • Grandma’s Boy
  • The Wizard
  • Need for Speed
  • Gamer
  • Existenz
  • Noobz
  • Max Payne
  • Far Cry
  • Hitman
  • Postal
  • BloodRayne: Wow, did Uwe Boll just miss it with this one. I mean, another game that could have been a great movie but needed so much more. It’s not easy to screw up a movie with Billy Zane Michael Madsen and Ben Kingsley when you have a plot as awesome as BloodRayne to work with in the first place…
  • DOA:Dead or Alive: Honestly, when I saw this I thought “Self, you should be playing this video game or watching someone play this video game, not watching actors trying to act like they’re in a video game. Happens a lot but I keep watching all of these…
  • Resident Evil: This has just become a great little franchise.
  • Silent Hill: I almost didn’t put this on because I just don’t like creepy movies.
  • Doom: This movie was doomed the second The Rock was cast in it.
  • House of the Dead: Gratuitously violent, just like the game. If you drink every time a zombie bites it you will die. In fact, if you’ve read everything up until now you might want to anyway. I like that this movie is authentic in that it doesn’t remotely try to be good. Stupid young people shoot stupid zombies.
  • Double Dragon: Billy Lee and Jimmy Lee. Somehow Alyssa Milano and Andy Dick end up in here too. As an early video game movie (apparently grunge was more popular than nerdy stuff at the time) I think the rest of that industry learned from this movie that special effects alone wouldn’t get you there and that you needed a plot.
  • Street Fighter: This is where we learned that Jean-Claude Van Damme should have stopped long before. But it was a video game, so everyone into such things at the time went to see it anyway. We knew it would be awful and we still went. Like Daredevil. It did have to compete with Dumb and Dumber for box office dollars, though… Now if Duncan McCracken had been cast as Guile it could have been saved…
  • Mortal Kombat francise: I had no idea this franchise could go downhill after the first one but… It did.
  • Wing Commander
Close Encounters of the Third Kind Sphere Explorers Surrogates Primer Nirvana Young Frankenstein The Time Machine Scanners Contact Untraceable Hackers Pwn Teh World Jobs Firewall 1. Office Space is the story of Peter Gibbons, a computer programmer who spends all day doing mindless tasks. Thanks to a hypnotic suggestion, Peter decides not to go to work at the same time his company starts laying people off. When layoffs affect his two best friends, they conspire to plant a virus that will embezzle money from the company into their account. The movie sports the scene where they take the fax out and smash it with baseball bats, the traffic scene on the way to work, the scene where he gets asked to work on Saturday, the scene where he pictures his boss and his new girlfriend (Jennifer Aniston) and of course the stapler. It is a classic and would be very easy to end up watching again tonight, as I write this… 2. Sneakers is probably one of the best hacking/phreaking movies of all time. Sure, it’s a little dated, but they all are. It was pretty good for the day though, and no completely off-the-wall ideas about what is and is not possible. The guy from 30something is awesome (aka “Dick”) and Martin Brice (Robert Redford) does a great job. River Phoenix is awesome and Dan Aykroyd is just like every conspiracy theorist ever. “It’s Not About Who’s Got the Most Bullets, It’s About Who’s Got the Information”. Great lines, great writing, great cast and still holds up as a pretty good movie after all these years (20, since it was released in 1992). 3. War Games is about Ferris Bueller (or a nerdy whizz kid of a Ferris Bueller) who connects into a top secret military mainframe and ends up with complete control over the United State’s nuclear arsenal. He then has to find the physical mainframe and disable it. What’s so awesome is that it’s InfoSec 101: use a password, put multiple layers of security in place and don’t hook ICBMs up to unsecured systems. Really makes the Wozniak quote “never trust a computer you can’t throw out of a window” make sense. I’ve been waiting for years to hear “shall we play a game?” Just like when I consider having an argument with my wife, “the only winning move is not to play.” Reisen Udongein Inaba(Apprentice)4. Tron is a movie about Kevin Flynn, a video game designer that gets converted into a digital person by an evil software pirate named Master Control. Disney somehow manages to take Jeff Bridges and turn him into a 3D version of himself. Complete with geometrical landscapes that comprise cyberspace, games and there’s even a girl (the one place where Tron isn’t very lifelike). 5. Hackers is the story of a young boy gets arrested by the Secret Service for writing a computer virus. He’s banned from using a computer until he turns 18. As a teenager, he moves to the big city to discover an awesome 2600-style underground of computer hackers. This one is complete with a teenage Angelina Jolie, skateboards, trench coats and modems. While it’s not completely realistic, it’s not utterly fantastical either (other than the hax0r kid getting the hot girl part). Imagine my disappointment when I got my first job with computers and Jolie wasn’t waiting for me… 6. Weird Science is a typical 80s flick about two unpopular teenage boys who “create” a woman via their computer. Their living and breathing creation is a gorgeous woman, Lisa (the name of the predecessor to the Macintosh, whose purpose is to boost their confidence level by putting them into situations which require Gary and Wyatt to act like men. On their road to becoming accepted, they encounter many hilarious obstacles, which gives the movie an overall sense of silliness. 7. Antitrust is a fictional account of computer programming extraordinaire Milo Hoffman. When Milo graduates from Stanford, he is recruited by Gary Winston, a character loosely based on Bill Gates. Winston is the CEO of a software company called NURV, on the brink of completing a global communications system called Synapse. Tragedy soon after strikes when Teddy Chin is murdered by a pair of Milo’s co-workers who made it look like a hate crime. Milo’s girlfriend Alice Poulson is turns out to be helping Winston and there are even bad guys working for the company inside the Justice Department. Basically, the message of the movie is that if you like computers, you should trusting no one and that nothing is as it seems. Luckily, in the real world, secrets can’t be kept for long (the more money you have the harder it seems to actually be to keep secrets). Which is why things like this don’t actually happen. But hey, at least we geeks get to feel important for a little while and this movie was actually well made. Having said that, Ryan Philippe is mediocre. Which was actually good enough in this one to be acceptable. 8. The Matrix trilogy is a fantastical look at futuristic hacker/programmer Thomas Anderson, living an ordinary life in 1999. Until Morpheus leads him into the real world, which is actually 200 years later and taken over by evil robots machines. The computers have created a fake 20th-century life called the Matrix to keep the human slaves asleep. The robots get power from the humans. Anderson is constantly chased by Agents (the opposite of that shirt that reads “I could replace you with a very tiny shell script”). At one point, the agents start replicating (I’ve accidentally filled a drive up by looping through cp before too). Anderson gets a cool name “Neo” and gets to be played by Keanu Reeves. All’s well (albeit varying degrees of well) until he becomes one with the matrix after about 7 or 8 hours of watching the movie. Actually, movies. It’s a trilogy. But Trinity (Reeves’ love interest) does use Nmap to run sshnuke against SSHv1 CRC32. Not a bad exploit for a lady wearing all leather… 9. The Net is the story of Angela Bennett, a computer expert whose interconnectedness comes back to haunt her. Back when Sandra Bullock was young and beautiful, she played an analyst who was never far from a computer. A friend like many of my own, whom she’s only spoken to over the net, Dale Hessman, sent her a program with a weird glitch needing debugging. She finds an easter egg on the disk which turns her life into a nightmare. Her records are erased from existence and she is given a new identity, complete with a police record. The best line is “computers are your life aren’t they?” Mostly because I find it easy to identify with such a line… Oh, and she uses a Mac! 10. The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo

Reisen Udongein Inaba(Apprentice)

is the most recent movie on this list. And there are more than one. I won’t say to see one over the others, but do check out the hacker girl. The latest installment has the most awesome song from Trent Reznor in the soundtrack, which I could totally listen to while writing scripties (and have). 11. Takedown is probably the movie that cost the least on the list to make. It’s not a great movie, but worthy of cult status to many. But here’s the thing: hacking stuff is pretty boring to watch. Unless of course, it’s the 2 days a year you leave your basement to go sit in Las Vegas and hack stuff with real humans around you… 12. The Pirates of Silicon Valley is a documentary about the tycoons that took control of the personal computer market. It starts with their time in college and then covers the actions that built up global empires now known as Apple and Microsoft Inc. My favorite part of this is the way that they made Steve Ballmer out to be a complete idiot. The parts about Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, Wozniak and Paul Allen were pretty well known to me, even before I saw the movie. With Noah Wyle I kept thinking that at some point he was going to throw on his scrubs and start giving someone an ER-style heart surgery. Anthony Michael Hall plays an uninspired Bill Gates. The best part of his part is when he does Saturday Night Fever on roller skates and then falls down. When he became the wealthiest man in the world I wonder if he got skate-dance lessons. 13. Swordfish was just a bad movie. But every computer nerd is going to watch it and hopefully turn it into a drinking game of some sort. Let me get this straight: a guy is supposed to hack into some of the most complex systems in the world and was supposed to do so while having relations with a lady and having a gun pointed at his head. Oh, did I mention, he’s dead if he isn’t done in 60 seconds? There are some really good uses of real computer stuff on some of the screens at time. But, Travolta should still give up his SAG card. 14. Johnny Mnemonic is the story of a data courier, again Keanu Reeves, who accepts a payload to big to keep in his head for long, that he then must deliver before it kills him. Classic Reeves, a cheesy flick. Has Dolph Lundgren, so must be at least funny-bad. Ice-T and Henry Rollins make appearances too (the 1990s, baby). Curious Fixation: An Infinite Runner Mac OS15. Live Free or Die Hard is the latest (4th) installment of the Die Hard saga. In this one though, the Mac Guy helps Bruce Willis hack into stuff and blow stuff up. This gets to be on the list because Bruce Willis says: “Command Center, it’s a basement.” I thought maybe he was talking about my place… 16. Minority Report is on the list because the tech that guy has was awesome. Not as good as the tech that Iron Man has, but a bit more realistic in some places. I actually think that a few products were developed after engineers watched this movie personally, and I’d love to see the rest made possible. Might have been higher except the cast. 17. D.A.R.Y.L. – After watching D.A.R.Y.L. I think I spent years thinking I was some sort of robot. Probably explains plenty. When I finally got around to reading Isaac Asimov’s Robot Series I guess I didn’t think I might be an android any longer. “It’s only human to make mistakes, but Daryl never does.” In this movie, a kid realizes he’s actually an artificial intelligence. He then gets chased down by the government, looking to reclaim their intellectual property. Classic ET-style the government are the bad guys kinda’ moments ensue. 18. Untraceable is a move from 2008 where Diane Lane plays a fed trying to track down a serial killer who posts live video of killing victims on the Internet. It’s borderline B-movie, but it’s not too badly done. Any plot gaps or technical mistakes I let slide due to the fact that the movie is set in Portland and the fact that I’ve always enjoyed Diane Lane. 19. Tron: Legacy is the second installment of Tron, which comes almost 30 years later, his son joins him in a movie that is more like the Big Lebowski turns digital samurai than the original… I’m kinda’ suck of the rich brat concept. But at least he breaks into a data center and blows stuff up before getting sucked into the Matrix… 20. Eagle Eye is the story of Jerry and Rachel, two strangers thrown together by a phone call from a lady they have never met. She makes them and others perform a series of increasingly dangerous situations, using everyday technology to track and control their moves. Turns out she’s a computer. Shia LaBeouf is the star of this. How he got to be the star of this, Transformers and the replacement for the Indiana Jones movies is beyond me. He’s not a terrible actor, but he’s not worthy of such reverence from the nerd/action movie elite… This is not as awesome a nerd movie as it is a symbol of the future of nerdy movies. I guess this one is more about that thing people call Mobility than computing, but close enough… 21. Lawnmower Man should have just been one movie. The only one with Stephen King, this was the first VR movie I remember seeing. Pierce Brosnan is the not-really-bad guy, but the creator of the bad guy. This is like a digital Frankenstein flick. 22. Disclosure is another movie from the 1990s (1994) that shows Michael Douglas getting seduced by a woman. But this time, he ends up stopping before he closes the deal. So instead of boiling the family pet, he just gets sued for sexual harrassment. Lots of computers and screen shots. And Demi Moore in a 90s power suit. Awesome stuff! 23. Virtuosity is about a virtual reality serial killer who’s actually more of a composite of serial killers. Weak plot, but Russell Crowe wasn’t a big star yet. It’s like of like Demolition Man, but with the VR spin on it. Russell Crowe is totally psycho. And he wears a couple of awesome suits in the movie (I’m pretty sure one of them was in Cool World as well). 50 terabytes was a lot back then! 24. eXistenZ

Tewi Inaba(Allied Earth Rabbit)

is another artificial reality movie, but Jennifer Jason Leigh is a video game designer. I thought that the BioPort concept was too much, especially for the time. The theme was already a bit done by then, but it was at least a weird new twist… 25. The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes had Kurt Russell. It was from the 60s. But the time spent on explaining all the computing was awesome! The best part about this movie is that glimpse you get of what computers were like before the advent of the personal computer. Thank you to the Altair, Apple and other machines that helped to get us into a new world order! Finally, while this clip isn’t a movie, if you were curious what hacking stuff really looks like most of the time: Miscellaneous:
  • Catch Me If You Can because of the social engineering awesomeness it happens to be.
  • Independence Day because aliens apparently have Windows running on all their ships.
  • Jumpin’ Jack Flash because Whoopi Goldberg is actually a somewhat convincing engineer (or not).
  • Mission Impossible gets a nod for having an upside down Apple logo (for the time).
  • The Italian Job gets a nod for the real inventor of Napster (I guess he can duke it out with Metallica next).
  • Revolution OS for being a documentary about Linux. I’d love to see more of this kind of thing in the years to come (there’s certainly enough money floating around in the computer world to make more of them happen).
  • Jurassic Park had some computing in it, but doesn’t really count.
  • The Thirteenth Floor doesn’t make the list because it wasn’t original enough in its look at virtual reality.
  • Code Hunter was terrible.
  • Enemy of the State didn’t make the list because I’m sick of movies making people into conspiracy theorists.
  • Max Hedroom for being cool, new and unique at the time – and perfect for the era.
  • Netforce – Oh wait, no, that was a typo.
  • One Point O – Which might have made the actual list had the star not become a police officer in Law and Order.
Very much excluded from this list:
  • Gone in 60 Seconds had a hacker named Toby, but it also had Nicolas Cage
  • Ocean’s 13 had Roman but it also had Brad Pitt
  • Superman III had Gus, but then, it was total crap
  • XXX: State of the Union had another Toby (popular name for movie hackers) but then, it had Vin Diesel

It is often said that when Kennedy gave his famous speech about why they had chosen to go to the moon, the United States was nowhere near being able to tackle that trip . The harsh reality is that they chose that challenge because in the rest of the options (placing a station in space or orbiting around the Moon) there was a huge amount of possibility that the Soviet Union would win the race. The key was to choose something iconic and inspiring; something materially impossible today, but imaginable in the long run; something, in short, that was at the perfect distance (temporally, financially and technologically) to give them time to regain all the advantage they had lost . It’s the same strategy that Elon Musk has been using project after project, and Neuralink , with its strange mix of old things and one-off innovations, is a wonderfully clear example.

Neuralink doesn’t just explode

I’m not going around the bush: the vast majority of things we saw at the Neuralink presentation at the weekend are nothing new . Especially the things that most caught the attention of the public (reading the activity of hundreds of neurons at the same time, decoding simple messages, using wireless systems or stimulating groups of neurons at pleasure) are part of the day-to-day life of the neuroscience laboratories of all the world.

It’s not just that many early psychology or biology students have rudimentary systems at their disposal that allow them to do all of these activities with laboratory animals. Is that in human beings, devices such as cochlear implants have been allowing for decades to “introduce” acoustic information from the environment into the brain and, in recent years, even play music directly from the internet . That, of course, is n’t to say that Elon Musk and his team didn’t come up with some very cool stuff (and that there’s actually a jump from what we got to see last year ). The advances in its wire / electrode system and in the integration system of many of them are incremental, but effective; wireless technology capable of transmitting large amounts of information in real time shows a very creative use of applied technologies; And the possibility of charging devices by induction (something fundamental considering that it would go inside the scalp) looks great and exciting.

At the same time disappointing. It is a paradox very typical of Neuralink, a company that, like all Elon Musk projects, has a curious ability to gather and organize everything that has been done in a field and put it to work in a striking way. But it offers little more than unspecific promises for questions that go beyond the limits of the field. In this case, with the information we have in our hands, the greatest innovations are design.

Interesting steps in a long way to go

The Neuralink team’s ability to collect this available technology, package it and design it in an attractive and seemingly safe way is formidable. Everything else: story, story story. Elon Musk spoke of treating depression, insomnia, and a dozen other neuropsychological illnesses; remove fear from people or discover the nature of consciousness. He also spoke of curing blindness, paralysis or deafness. However, evidence, data and studies are conspicuous by their absence.

They must be somewhere. After all, they explained, in June they obtained permission from the FDA to begin conducting human trials, but little else is known. In general, Elon Musk was very careful not to give dates, nor to establish closed calendars . There are no clear data on what they are going to do, or what they have done. And the truth is that, in the context of what it was supposed to be (an event to attract talent), it may be understandable. However, it would be innocent not to admit that an event that was touted as the first sample of a “working Neuralink device” went beyond a human resources campaign. It was a re-enactment of the same strategy we talked about at the beginning: focusing attention on a distant goal to get support for the road that still needs to be covered. From what we know so far, Neuralink is light years away from any of its more interesting ‘promises’. In fact, they don’t even seem to have successfully solved key problems like maintaining equipment within the brain. The good news is that they are advancing and, although it is difficult to estimate exactly, it seems that they are advancing the entire discipline . That, beyond all the problems that can arise from the project, is good news.