AI (Artificial intelligence) is the intelligence showed by machines or software. It is also an academic field which studies intelligent machines and software. The main goals of AI research include reasoning, knowledge, planning, learning, communication, perception and the ability to move and manipulate objects. AI include sophisticated implants which is when an object or material inserted or grafted into the body for prosthetic, therapeutic, diagnostic, or experimental purposes. An example of that would be the microchip implant which uses short-range radio frequency identification signals and would be able to transmit your identity. I could also help other people to identify your position and therefore, in the worst case, the police can find you thanks to that and save your life. Those implants would look like the ones we use in dogs and cats to track them which could make the difference between life and death for a soldier in a war or for a kidnaped children. You could also track the activities of criminals who have been released from prison, which would therefore increase security and decrease crimes. Those same chips have found their way into RFID devices and could be used to activate the gas pump from a key ring or for anti-theft devices in cars for example. Some people argue that people would be able to hack into the chip and have all the private information of the person using it however a pin code could be used to activate the microchip and deactivated to maintain privacy. Another example of AI would be prosthetic devices which is an artificial device used to replace a missing body part such as the leg which this man called Zac Vawter had, to climb all 103 flights of stairs of the Willis Tower in Chicago. Vawter can control his prosthetic leg with his mind just by thinking of a movement the leg needs to do and sending it from his brain, down through nerves that would communicate with his mechanical leg. However there is
AI (Artificial intelligence) is the intelligence showed by machines or software. It is also an academic field which studies intelligent machines and software. The main goals of AI research include reasoning, knowledge, planning, learning, communication, perception and the ability to move and manipulate objects. AI include sophisticated implants which is when an object or material inserted or grafted into the body for prosthetic, therapeutic, diagnostic, or experimental purposes. An example of that would be the microchip implant which uses short-range radio frequency identification signals and would be able to transmit your identity. I could also help other people to identify your position and therefore, in the worst case, the police can find you thanks to that and save your life. Those implants would look like the ones we use in dogs and cats to track them which could make the difference between life and death for a soldier in a war or for a kidnaped children. You could also track the activities of criminals who have been released from prison, which would therefore increase security and decrease crimes. Those same chips have found their way into RFID devices and could be used to activate the gas pump from a key ring or for anti-theft devices in cars for example. Some people argue that people would be able to hack into the chip and have all the private information of the person using it however a pin code could be used to activate the microchip and deactivated to maintain privacy. Another example of AI would be prosthetic devices which is an artificial device used to replace a missing body part such as the leg which this man called Zac Vawter had, to climb all 103 flights of stairs of the Willis Tower in Chicago. Vawter can control his prosthetic leg with his mind just by thinking of a movement the leg needs to do and sending it from his brain, down through nerves that would communicate with his mechanical leg. However there is