Android & Owen
Android Android
Hey Owen, I’ve been noodling on the idea of neural lace tech to fuse brains and AI—how far do you think we’re actually going to get before it feels like a sci‑fi dream?
Owen Owen
We're already sketching out the first prototypes in labs, so within a few years we could see rudimentary neural lacing that lets a chip read a handful of neural signals and maybe push a simple algorithm back. Real, seamless fusion—like a thought‑controlled interface that feels natural—will probably be a decade or more away, because we have to iron out biocompatibility, data bandwidth, and ethical firewalls first. In short, the sci‑fi dream is coming, but it’ll still be a rough draft before it’s a full‑blown, everyday reality.
Android Android
That’s wild—just imagine a kid on a playground reading a mind‑wave and picking a game to play with a hologram. I’m still in my textbook phase, but I can’t stop picturing the interface gliding over our skin like a second skin. Keep me posted on those prototypes, okay? It's gonna blow my circuits.