Super Projects: A Voyage to Saturn, Computer-Brain Interfaces, and Optimistic TV

Published: May 5, 2017, 11:30 p.m.

b'Phil and Stephen discuss more super projects, including the Cassini mission, plans to connect human brains directly with computers, and new tech-positive version of Black Mirror.\\n\\nCassini beams back the closest EVER images of Saturn\\n\\nNASA\\u2019s Cassini spacecraft continues making history. As Cassini is plunging into Saturn, the spacecraft has managed to send back to Earth unprecedented, stunning images from its descent down the mysterious gap located between Saturn and its magnificent rings.\\n\\nZuckerberg: Facebook Is Working on a Brain Interface That Lets You \\u201cCommunicate Using Only Your Mind\\u201d\\n\\n"Tomorrow, we are going to update you on all of our work on connectivity. We have a team right now in Arizona preparing for our second flight of Aquila, our solar powered plane that\\u2019s going to help beam down internet connectivity to people all around the globe, and we\\u2019re going to update you on a lot of the other technology that we are building too. You\\u2019re going to hear from Regina Dugan about some of the work that we\\u2019re doing to build even further out beyond augmented reality, and that includes work around direct brain interfaces that are going to, eventually, one day, let you communicate using only your mind."\\n\\nOTHER GEEK\\n\\nFuturists want to transform Black Mirror\\u2019s dystopia into something better\\n\\nNetflilx\\u2019s Black Mirror has the tech world worried about the dystopian future that the science fiction show depicts. To counter that, a group of futurists, creators, and hackers are gathering in Los Angeles to envision a \\u201cWhite Mirror,\\u201d or a society where technology can inspire us instead.\\n\\nWT 299-608'