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Moon Ribas is co-founder of the Cyborg Foundation and an avant-garde dancer who choreographs according to vibes emanating from the seismic sensor surgically embedded into her elbow. We asked her ...
Artist and cyborg advocate Neil Harbisson has an "eyeborg," a device implanted in his skull that lets him hear colors. Friends can even use an app to beam images to his brain. Crave's Michael ...
Neil Harbisson is the world’s first legally recognized cyborg. He has an antenna in his skull that gives him the ability to see color.
In 2010, Harbisson cofounded the Cyborg Foundation that supports other people who either need or want a tech implant.
Moon Ribas and Neil Harbisson from The Cyborg Foundation urged the audience at Pioneers Festival to consider experimenting with cyborgism. Both Ribas and Harbisson use technology to extend their ...
Spanish director Rafel Duran Torrent has won the $100,000 cash prize in the Focus Forward Filmmaker Competition at the Sundance Film Festival. The awards, the most lucrative ever given to short ...
A color-blind cyborg gains the ability to hear colors, showcasing groundbreaking advancements in technology.
SIMON: Mr. Harbisson, you co-founded the Cyborg Foundation. What do you do and what do you mean when you list one of the goals of the organization to defend cyborg rights?
Scientists have created programmable cyborg cells that can't divide and grow, opening new doors for medicine and environmental cleanup.
But Harbisson said his not-for-profit Cyborg Foundation tries to make such augmentations “as available as possible".
Neil Harbisson is the world’s first legally recognized cyborg. He has an antenna in his skull that gives him the ability to see color.
Neil Harbisson is the world’s first legally recognized cyborg. He has an antenna in his skull that gives him the ability to see color.
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