Nokia CEO says 6G will be here by 2030 — but you might not access it via your smartphone
Headquartered in Finland, Nokia builds telecoms networks that enable phones and other internet-enabled devices to communicate with one another.
Asked when he thinks the world will move away from using smartphones to using smart glasses and other devices that are worn on the face, [Nokia CEO] Lundmark said it will happen before 6G arrives.
[...] "By then, definitely the smartphone as we know it today will not anymore be the most common interface," he said. "Many of these things will be built directly into our bodies."
He did not specify exactly what he was referring to but some companies, such as Elon Musk's Neuralink, are working on producing electronic devices that can be implanted into the brain and used for communication with machines and other people. On a more basic level, chips can be implanted into people's fingers and used to unlock things.
6G may be here in the next 8 years or so, but I believe the suggestion of implanted devices being commonplace is a totally unrealistic statement. We have not yet reached the stage where 'implanting things into the brain' has become a simple and low risk proposition. But even if we had, who is going to be performing these operations and at what rate? Who would pay for such medical treatment?
However, let us put these problems aside for a moment. What do you see as the future of personal communications? Let's discuss some realistic or even 'off-the'wall' ideas. What effect would such devices have on our privacy and freedoms? In Star Trek the communicator device, which appeared on our (television) screens around the mid 1960s, does not look too different from some of today's smartphones although at that time it was pure science fiction.
(Score: 4, Interesting) by HiThere on Tuesday May 31 2022, @01:26PM
It's not only living tissue that gets reacted to, though "rejected" might be the wrong word. Different substances, though, cause different reactions. Think about splinters. Consider artificial knees. So embedded electronics is possible, though you would need to encase them so that the only thing sensed by the body was something it didn't react to. (And, of course, people differ in their reaction profile as well as in other ways.)
It's definitely a non-trivial problem. Even rigidity can be a make-or-break issue. If an electrode is too rigid, THAT will kill the neuron it tries to connect to.
Javascript is what you use to allow unknown third parties to run software you have no idea about on your computer.