Miesha Tate wishes Cris Cyborg hit Angela Magana even harder – FanSided

Jul 24, 2015; Chicago, IL, USA; Miesha Tate during weigh ins for UFC Fight Night at United Center. Mandatory Credit: Kamil Krzaczynski-USA TODAY Sports

Tony Parker hopeful Spurs offer him one more contract by Nam Tran

P.K. Subban arrives for Game 4 of Stanley Cup Final with endless amount of Listerine (Video) by Michael Whitlow

The UFC retreat was meant to bring the fighters together in a place where they could relax and enjoy some time on the UFCs dime. It turned out to have the opposite effect between some of the fighters.

UFC featherweightcontender Cris Cyborg was involved in an altercation with bantamweight Angela Magana outside the fighter hotel during this UFC retreat. Cyborg hit Magana in the face and has since been charged with misdemeanorassault as a result.

The fight stemmed from a social media post that Magana put on Twitter regarding Cyborg. Cyborg was not pleased by the cyberbullying from Magana and let her know when they met face to face in Las Vegas. The UFC has not issued a punishment for Cyborg to this point in time.

This weekend in Rio de Janerio, Brazil while speaking to media before UFC 212, former bantamweight champion Miesha Tate stated her feelings on this subject.

I wish she would have punched Angela harder. Angela is a bully, you know she is like a child that never grew up, and its not right and I think there should be harsher consequence for people who publicly bully people on the internet or in person so I think she had it coming. I dont blame Cyborg a bit, I hope that the legal system looks at everything because she really had it coming. Im team Cyborg all the way with that.

This altercation with Magana should not effect Cyborg from returning to the octagon. UFC president Dana White recentlystated on the UFC Unfiltered podcast with Matt Serra and Ray Long, that Cyborg is due to fight at UFC 214 in Anaheim, California, although the opponent is not yet determined.

See the original post here:

Miesha Tate wishes Cris Cyborg hit Angela Magana even harder - FanSided

Miesha Tate wishes ‘Cyborg’ would have punched Angela Magana harder – MMAjunkie.com

RIO DE JANEIRO Former UFC womens bantamweight champion Miesha Tate has no sympathy for Angela Magana when it comes to taking a punch from Cristiane Justino.

Tate is gleeful about Justinos actions, if not worried about the repercussions.

That was a great day for me, Tate (18-7 MMA, 5-4 UFC) said of the clash between the fighters this past month at the UFC Athlete Retreat 2017, which continues to make headlines as Justino awaits her legal fate. I thought it was wonderful. I wish she would have punched Angela harder.

Las Vegas police cited Justino (17-1 MMA, 2-0 UFC) for misdemeanor battery after socking Magana at the meeting. The Brazilian featherweight reportedly was angry over bullying messages Magana (11-8 MMA, 0-2 UFC) sent on social media, and the two then crossed paths at the summit.

Magana has claimed prosecutors are looking into a felony charge and said she will sue Justino.

Dozens of fighters have weighed in on the punch, largely backing Justinos handling of the situation. A few figures have dissented in favor of Magana; UFC President Dana White and three-time UFC title challenger Chael Sonnen said the Brazilian fighters actions amounted to assault.

But Tate called attention to the behavior that led Justino to punch Magana, calling Magana a bully and a child who never grew up.

I think there should be harsher consequences for people who publicly bully people on the Internet, in person everything, Tate added.

Magana mocked a picture of Justino working with cancer patients, comparing Cyborg to a horror movie character.

Justinos misdemeanor battery charge carries a potential punishment of six months in jail and a $1,000 fine, which looms as she is expected to compete against an unnamed opponent at UFC 214 on July 29 in Anaheim, Calif. The charge could, however, be reduced to community service depending on mitigating factors found by investigators.

Tate hopes the punishment wont be too harsh for Justino; she told reporters she thought Magana had it coming.

I hope that the legal system looks at everything, she said. Im team Cyborg all the way with that.

One thing Tate wont be doing is picking a fight with Magana. Shes perfectly content with retirement and doesnt plan on coming back to the octagon unless her rival and former champ, Ronda Rousey (12-2 MMA, 6-2 UFC), comes back.

Watch the video above to hear Tate weigh in on the situation.

And for more on the UFCs upcoming schedule, check out the UFC Rumors section of the site.

Visit link:

Miesha Tate wishes 'Cyborg' would have punched Angela Magana harder - MMAjunkie.com

Watch a Genetically Modified Cyborg Dragonfly Take Flight For The … – Nerdist

Earlier this year, we learned about DragonflEye, a project from biomedical solutions company Draper that aims to turn dragonflies into genetically modified insect cyborgs that wear energy-harvesting solar backpacks and are completely under human control. Basically, theyre looking to collaborate with mother nature on the smallest, most-nimble drone around, which we can operate via pulses of light to the dragonflys nerve cord that allow us to control the insects steering neurons.

In February, the technology was still in more of a conceptual stage and hadnt been tested on actual dragonflies. Now, just a few months later, we have video footage of DragonflEye in action.

In the clip above, we can see a real dragonfly being fitted with the device and proof that its able to actually fly. The video doesnt do much to prove that its flight is human-controlled, but its also just a 30-second teaser clip, so were sure theres more to come.

DragonflEye is a totally new kind of micro-aerial vehicle thats smaller, lighter and stealthier than anything else thats manmade, Draper biomedical engineer Jesse J. Wheeler said when announcing the project. This system pushes the boundaries of energy harvesting, motion sensing, algorithms, miniaturization and optogenetics, all in a system small enough for an insect to wear.

What sorts of purposes can you imagine DragonflEye being used for? Surveillance? Farming? Checking if whatevers in the microwave is almost done because getting up is a lot to ask sometimes? Fire off some ideas in the comments below!

Featured image: Draper

Read the original here:

Watch a Genetically Modified Cyborg Dragonfly Take Flight For The ... - Nerdist

This Cyborg Dragonfly Is the Tiniest Drone – Gizmodo – Gizmodo

The smaller a drone gets, the more places it can be easily flown. But while many researchers have been trying to tackle the monumental challenge of building drones that look and behave like tiny insects, a new approach has engineers giving Mother Natures existing creations drone-like upgrades.

The biggest hurdle with building tiny drones that can fly almost anywhere is powering them. A small flying craft is only strong enough to carry a small battery, which dramatically limits its flight time. But somehow that mosquito in your tent while camping can buzz your ear for hours on end before refuelingon you.

We can only make electronics so small, though, so upgrading a mosquito isnt currently feasible. But a dragonfly? Researchers at Charles Stark Draper Laboratory and Howard Hughes Medical Institute have created something they call DragonflEye: a remote control drone built on a living dragonfly.

The dragonfly has been upgraded with a collection of tiny sensors that will eventually let it collect data, or make readings, in places where humans cant safely go. Tiny onboard solar cells power the DragonflEyes electronics, which includes a unique technology that allows a pilot to remotely control where the insect flies.

The dragonfly used here has been genetically engineered with what the researchers call steering neurons inside the creatures spinal cord. By inserting light-sensitive genes similar to those found in an eye, the DragonflEye can be controlled using pulses of light transmitted using custom-designed optical structures that are more flexible than fiber optics. The advantage to this approach is that other neurons in the dragonfly arent affected (or damaged) in the process, allowing it to fly with far more agility than even our most advanced drones.

The video released yesterday shows the DragonflEye taking its first flight, albeit in a straight line as the researchers are still perfecting its unique control system. But theyre confident their creation will eventually be able to take to the skies with almost as much maneuverability as a dragonfly without cyborg upgrades.

But aside from creating what could be the ultimate spy tool, the technology powering the DragonflEye could be adapted for use in humans who suffer from reduced mobility or movement as a result of issues with their nervous system or spinal cord. These researchers arent yet promising to miraculously make people walk again, but their work on using light to stimulate signals in the nervous system could potentially have innovative medical uses as well.

[Charles Stark Draper Laboratory via New Atlas]

See the article here:

This Cyborg Dragonfly Is the Tiniest Drone - Gizmodo - Gizmodo

Draper’s Genetically Modified Cyborg DragonflEye Takes Flight – IEEE Spectrum

Image: Draper via Vimeo A live dragonfly with a cybernetic backpack and optical implants is now airborne.

In January, we wrote about a cybernetic micro air vehicle under development at Draper called DragonflEye. DragonflEye consists of a living, slightly modified dragonfly that carries a small backpack of electronics. The backpack interfaces directly with the dragonflys nervous system to control it, and uses tiny solar panels to harvest enough energy to power itself without the need for batteries. Draper showed us a nifty looking mock-up of what the system might look like a few months ago, but today, theyve posted the first video of DragonflEye taking to the air.

The unique thing about DragonflEye (relative to other cyborg insects) is that it doesnt rely on spoofing the insects sensors or controlling its muscles, but instead uses optical electrodes to inject steering commands directly into the insects nervous system, which has been genetically tweaked to accept them. This means that the dragonfly can be controlled to fly where you want, without sacrificing the built-in flight skills that make insects the envy of all other robotic micro air vehicles.

It looks like the above video is mostly showing that the electronics and hardware can be interfaced to the insect while still allowing it to fly, so we may not be seeing the control system in action yet. Even so, this research seems to be moving along very, very quickly, and were not entirely sure when this video was shot, so our advice is to give every dragonfly you see zipping around outside a second glance, just in case.

For lots more on DragonflEye, including why Draperthinks this research is worth pursuing, make sure and read our article and interview with principal investigator Jesse J. Wheeler.

[ Draper ]

IEEE Spectrums award-winning robotics blog, featuring news, articles, and videos on robots, humanoids, drones, automation, artificial intelligence, and more. Contact us:e.guizzo@ieee.org

Sign up for the Automaton newsletter and get biweekly updates about robotics, automation, and AI, all delivered directly to your inbox.

A robot that uses artificial sweat can cool its motors without bulky radiators 13Oct2016

R&D lab Draper is using genetic engineering and optoelectronics to build cybernetic insects 25Jan

Attack eagles are training to become part of the Dutch National Police anti-drone arsenal 1Feb2016

With a clever mechanism that allows it to efficiently take off and land on water, this drone could use solar charging to travel around lakes all summer 1Jun

You don't have to register your personal drones with the government, for now 22May

This omnidirectional eight-rotor drone flies like no other aircraft 17May

Drone operators face a patchwork of federal, state, and local regulations that is increasingly hard to keep up with 12May

Crashing into objects has taught this drone to fly autonomously, by learning what not to do 10May

Facebook's Yael Maguire talks about millimeter wave networks, Aquila, and flying tethered antennas at the F8 developer conference 19Apr

Should drones be required to broadcast an identifying code by radio? 19Apr

Gliding drones made out of plywood can deliver supplies over long distances with pinpoint accuracy 17Apr

But the Federal Aviation Administration is allowing PrecisionHawk to test a system for managing small drones beyond visual line of sight 15Apr

In Rwanda, the drone delivery startup Zipline is now bringing blood across mountains 31Mar

Should drones be required to broadcast an identifying code by radio? 30Mar

Inspiration for this design came from insect wings 9Mar

And they have a new piece of hardwarethe Jetson TX2that they hope everyone will use for this edge processing 8Mar

San Francisco R&D firm develops low-cost, precision air-delivery system using paper gliders 1Feb

A beautifully designed robot bat will be capable of robust acrobatics that quadrotors can't match 1Feb

Neurala wants to build powerful AI systems that run on smartphone chips to power robots, drones, and self-driving cars 17Jan

$34 million in drone preorders wasn't enough to keep Lily open 12Jan

Continued here:

Draper's Genetically Modified Cyborg DragonflEye Takes Flight - IEEE Spectrum

Germaine de Randamie Should Be Punished For Her Refusal To Face Cris Cyborg – Forbes


ESPN (blog)
Germaine de Randamie Should Be Punished For Her Refusal To Face Cris Cyborg
Forbes
The UFC women's featherweight title was already sitting at the bottom of any sensible championship power rankings list, but Germaine de Randamie's refusal to defend the belt against Cris Cyborgthe only fighter in the division anyone cares aboutmakes ...
Germaine de Randamie: No 'fear' in refusal to fight 'Cyborg' JustinoESPN (blog)
Trading Shots: Is Germaine de Randamie running from 'Cyborg' Justino?MMAjunkie.com
Cat Zingano On Cris Cyborg, De Randamie, Nunes: 'I'm Going To ...FloCombat
MMAWeekly (blog) -MMA Fighting -International Business Times, India Edition
all 12 news articles »

Read the original:

Germaine de Randamie Should Be Punished For Her Refusal To Face Cris Cyborg - Forbes

Video shows maiden flight of cyborg dragonfly – New Atlas

A cyborg dragonfly, named the DragonflEye, has taken flight for the first time in a video (Credit: Charles Stark Draper Laboratory)

Over the past few years, a variety of cyborg animals have been unleashed, as scientists kit out cockroaches, locusts and even turtles with electronic accoutrements. Back in January, researchers from Charles Stark Draper Laboratory and Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) outlined plans to fit dragonflies with tiny electronic backpacks, allowing them to be controlled remotely. In a new video, their cyborg dragonflies have taken flight for the first time.

The animal kingdom is fertile inspirational ground for new technology, but it's difficult to properly mimic the speed and manoeuvrability of a dragonfly, or the complicated olfactory system of a locust. Rather than designing robots and sensors from scratch, scientists have developed ways to take advantage of the hard work nature has already done, by equipping live insects with electronic systems.

NEW ATLAS NEEDS YOUR SUPPORT

Upgrade to a Plus subscription today, and read the site without ads.

It's just US$19 a year.

In the case of Draper's and HHMI's DragonflEye, the insect is controlled through pulses of light piped into certain neurons in the bug's brain, which allows a human pilot to steer it like a drone. The eventual aim, the team says, is to use the tiny cyborgs to guide pollination, deliver payloads, or scout unsafe territory.

With the new video, the team has revealed how the solar-powered backpacks are attached to the insects, and briefly shown the DragonflEye taking wing for the first time. Check it out below.

Source: Charles Stark Draper Laboratory

Excerpt from:

Video shows maiden flight of cyborg dragonfly - New Atlas

Germaine de Randamie Should Be Punished for Running from Cyborg Justino – Bleacher Report

Germaine de RandamieFrank Franklin II/Associated Press

There are always reasons why. Peoplegive and receive excuses all the time. It's one of the things that human beings do to get along with the other human beings.But there's a layer, not too far below the epidermis, where excuses become something different.

Did the dog eat it? Maybe you'll be washing your hair that night? Perhaps you hear your mother calling.

It's not a matter of believability at that point. You're not actuallytrying to convince anyone of anything. Rather, the point is to get the request or the requester to do one thing and one thing only: go the hell away.

At this point, let's welcome Germaine de Randamie into the conversation.

You may know de Randamie (7-3) as the first person ever to hold the UFC women's featherweight belt. To do so, she defeated Holly Holmin a bout that saw de Randamie take heat for illegally striking Holm after the bell not once but twicein February at UFC 208.

In the cage immediately after the fight, de Randamie said of Holm and her stick-and-move, clinch-heavy strategy:It was close. But I came to fight, and she didnt want to fight me."

Moments later, broadcaster Joe Rogan asked de Randamie the million-dollar question, the one to which everyone just kind of assumed a foregone response. Did she, the new women's featherweight champ, want to fight the consensus best women's featherweight fighter, Cristiane "Cyborg" Justino?

"You know, I want to fight everybody," she said. "If Cris Cyborg is the one I have to fight, I'll fight her. Right now, I really need surgery on my hand. I'm gonna get surgery on my hand, and let's see after."

Not exactly the emphatic response fans and UFC brass (not to mention Cyborg) might have hoped for, but fair enough. Injuries happen. Fix it and come back strong, champ.

Oh, but wait. What's this? One day laterone day later!de Randamie called for an immediate rematch with Holm.

I have nothing but respect for Holly and the UFC, and because of that I want to say right now that I think I owe it to Holly and the fans to do this fight again to make sure that the winner of this historic belt is crystal clear, de Randamie wrote on Instagram.

No mention of Cyborg. Or the hand, for that matter.

Eventually the UFC booked Holm for a June bout in Singapore. So much for that immediate rematch. Team de Randamie countered bymumbling about retirementrumors and "personal issues."

A few hardy GDR believers, clinging to hope like kittens to fallen trees in a flood-swollen river (don't worry, they were rescued), might have gotten excited when UFC President Dana White said on May 15 that an update on the situation was coming soon and that "Cyborg will fight this summer." Could Cyborg-GDR finally be in the works?

That hope was all but dashedThursday, when de Randamie's manager, Brian Butler-Au of SuckerPunch Entertainment,told MMA Junkiethat de Randamie would not fight Cyborg because Cyborg was "a proven cheater."

That's an interesting statement from Team de Randamie. Yes, Cyborg failed a drug test in 2011, but de Randamie was caughtyou know, on camerapunching Holm after the horn just last February.

Ah, but the dog must have eaten their footage.

The final blow landed Monday when de Randamie announced that shedespite holding the 145-pound featherweight beltwould return to 135 pounds.

My reason to reject the fight now has nothing but nothing at all to do with my fear, she wrote. I believe that if you want to do sports you do this without any means that can affect the muscle mass. Ias a top athletealways trained, always watched my food and put 18 years of my life on sports, without using just one means that is not allowed.

Another reference to Cyborg's past PED use. Plenty of other fighters have come back from a failed drug test to compete again. Is there some reason that Cyborg is different? And if she felt so strongly about this principle that she would give up her championship beltthe one that caused her to shout out loud for joy when she received itwhy didn't she mention it at UFC 208?

Any attempt to look behind the curtains at UFC headquarters is like trying to read tea leaves in a glass of cement. However, it is not unrealistic to speculate that the UFC has incentives for champions to defend titles and placed a fairly substantial offer on the table for de Randamie to defend against Cyborg. GDR-Cyborg could headline a pay-per-view. That's a lot of money.(At a bare minimum, title defenses land you in the highest slots of any card, which in and of itself increases pay.)

Certainly Cyborg (17-1-1) is feared for a reason. She's probably the most devastating MMA fighterman or womanon planet earth right now.

De Randamie chose not to rise to that occasion, essentially relinquishing her championship so Cyborg could face Megan Anderson or some other more willing competitoranyone but her.

Whatever happens with de Randamie moving forward, the UFC should discipline her. Go ahead and strip her of the belt. Then perhaps banish her to the matchmaking land of wind and ghosts. Let her test the latest judo import on a deep Sao Paolo undercard. Should they cut her outright?

The UFC should be upset. Its brand-new division, fresh out of the gate, is now tarred with illegitimacy. Its first champion wouldn't fight the best. What kind of cloud does that put over this division, and over Cyborg, whom the UFC appears to (finally) view as the marketable, dominant athlete that she is?

It's more than just the one division, though. The UFC has devalued its own belts enough with all these interim titlesinterim this and interim thatessentially printing money from its own press to add short-term excitement to a division or an individual bout while causing harmful inflation over the long run. The UFC doesn't need fighters expediting that process.

Now, one might say, "Easy for you to say, keyboard warrior. You're not out here fighting for a living." And that's exactly right. If you're not a fighter, there's no pretense of toughness, at least not on this level. That illustrates why de Randamie, for whom such a pretense does exist, particularly given her champion status, should no longer be taken seriously, at least not unless there's a redemptive action.

As it is, it's like being a chef who doesn't like fire or a construction worker who doesn't like dirt or a kid with a dog who's unceasingly hungry for looseleaf.

Here is the original post:

Germaine de Randamie Should Be Punished for Running from Cyborg Justino - Bleacher Report

A Mechanical Engineer Spent 7 Months Building an Epic Cyborg Ninja Helmet – Futurism

In Brief Diego Valdes spent seven months creating a cosplay based off the Metal Gear Solid video game franchise. The partially 3D-printed cyborg helmet is creative in its light fixtures, movable parts, and design.

Diego Valdes is a Mechanical Engineer by day and creative cosplay creator by night. HisYoutube account,diegator,has risen to internet stardom thanks to his most recent creation, the Metal Gear Solid Gray Fox Helmet.

His creation is an homage to the metal gear solid franchise, but even those whoare unaware of the cosplays significance are starstruck by ninja cyborg helmet itself.

The design took Valdes over seven months to complete, and it seems his efforts have paid off. The parts of the masks were 3D printed, while Valdes created his own light fixtures, switches, and facial transitions that can becontrolled and powered by buttons inside the helmet.

Valdes motivation to build this technologically and aesthetically beautiful helmet highlights a trend in our society. We are gradually becoming a community of creators, builders, and innovators. Whether its pushing the envelope of scientific knowledge or investing that knowledge into building what we could previously only imagine, we are coming a long way in building a future ofour own.

Read more:

A Mechanical Engineer Spent 7 Months Building an Epic Cyborg Ninja Helmet - Futurism

Cyborgs at work: Employees get implanted with microchips – CBS News

STOCKHOLM -- The syringe slides in between the thumb and index finger. Then, with a click, a microchip is injected in the employees hand. Another cyborg is created.

What could pass for a dystopian vision of the workplace is almost routine at the Swedish startup hub Epicenter. The company offers to implant its workers and startup members with microchips the size of grains of rice that function as swipe cards: to open doors, operate printers, or buy smoothies with a wave of the hand.

Play Video

Lots of pets have them, and now some people do, too -- tiny, implantable computer chips. Enthusiasts say the chips offer convenience and security...

The injections have become so popular that workers at Epicenter hold parties for those willing to get implanted.

The biggest benefit I think is convenience, said Patrick Mesterton, co-founder and CEO of Epicenter. As a demonstration, he unlocks a door by merely waving near it. It basically replaces a lot of things you have, other communication devices, whether it be credit cards or keys.

The technology in itself is not new. Such chips are used as virtual collar plates for pets. Companies use them to track deliveries. Its just never been used to tag employees on a broad scale before. Epicenter and a handful of other companies are the first to make chip implants broadly available.

And as with most new technologies, it raises security and privacy issues. While biologically safe, the data generated by the chips can show how often an employee comes to work or what they buy. Unlike company swipe cards or smartphones, which can generate the same data, a person cannot easily separate themselves from the chip.

Of course, putting things into your body is quite a big step to do and it was even for me at first, said Mesterton, remembering how he initially had had doubts.

But then on the other hand, I mean, people have been implanting things into their body, like pacemakers and stuff to control your heart, he said. Thats a way, way more serious thing than having a small chip that can actually communicate with devices.

Epicenter, which is home to more than 100 companies and some 2,000 workers, began implanting workers in January 2015. Now, about 150 workers have them. A company based in Belgium also offers its employees such implants, and there are isolated cases around the world where tech enthusiasts have tried this out in recent years.

Play Video

Researchers at North Carolina State University are turning cockroaches into joystick-controlled cyborgs for use in search and rescue operations. ...

The small implants use Near Field Communication (NFC) technology, the same as in contactless credit cards or mobile payments. When activated by a reader a few centimeters (inches) away, a small amount of data flows between the two devices via electromagnetic waves. The implants are passive, meaning they contain information that other devices can read, but cannot read information themselves.

Ben Libberton, a microbiologist at Stockholms Karolinska Institute, says hackers could conceivably gain huge swathes of information from embedded microchips. The ethical dilemmas will become bigger the more sophisticated the microchips become.

The data that you could possibly get from a chip that is embedded in your body is a lot different from the data that you can get from a smartphone, he says. Conceptually you could get data about your health, you could get data about your whereabouts, how often youre working, how long youre working, if youre taking toilet breaks and things like that.

Libberton said that if such data is collected, the big question remains of what happens to it, who uses it, and for what purpose.

So far, Epicenters group of cyborgs doesnt seem too concerned.

People ask me, Are you chipped? and I say, Yes, why not, said Fredric Kaijser, 47, the chief experience officer at Epicenter. And they all get excited about privacy issues and what that means and so forth. And for me its just a matter of I like to try new things and just see it as more of an enabler and what that would bring into the future.

The implants have become so popular that Epicenter workers stage monthly events where attendees have the option of being chipped for free.

That means visits from self-described body hacker Jowan Osterlund from Biohax Sweden who performs the operation.

He injects the implants using pre-loaded syringes into the fleshy area of the hand, just next to the thumb. The process lasts a few seconds, and more often than not there are no screams and barely a drop of blood. The next step for electronics is to move into the body, he says.

Sandra Haglof, 25, who works for Eventomatic, an events company that works with Epicenter, has had three piercings before, and her left hand barely shakes as Osterlund injects the small chip.

I want to be part of the future, she laughs.

View original post here:

Cyborgs at work: Employees get implanted with microchips - CBS News

Turning Cyborg. You May be Microchipped in the Future. – Big Think

You're putting that where?!

A company in Sweden has been putting microchips in their employees in order to improve efficiency. Frustrated by the hassle of finding keys for doors or a debit card for food? Employees as the Stockholm-based Epicenter can literally use their hand. And while having the microchip implant is currently not mandatory for workers there, the prospect of technology inserted into our body sets off someunderstandable Orwellian fears. There is a fine line between efficiency and control with new technology.

Forget apps. In the near future, we may be saying, "There's an implant for that."

So, Why Does This Get Under Our Skin?

On one hand, technology being embedded into our body is nothing dramatically new. Pacemakers, for example, have been used for years to normalize heart rates by sending low-energy electrical pulses. Cats and dogs have also been getting microchipped for quite some time.

On the other hand, microchipping humans is a concept that can easily conjure up images of a dystopian future where everyone is permanentlyconnected to the internet and constantly tracked. There would be no ability to unplug if you are permanently plugged in. And there would be no sense of privacy if you are a perpetual source of data generation. In order to get a full grasp on the issue of microchipping, I reached out to Gerd Leonhard. Gerd is a Swiss futurist and humanist, and author of Technology vs. Humanity: The Coming Clash Between Man and Machine.

The Implants Are Coming

"This is about Human Augmentation," states Gerd, "and I am afraid it will become as normal as using a mobile phone." In order for that to happen, Leonhard believes that the microchips used will be much more sophisticated. He cites the prospect of general "apps for the body." In the near future, we may have nanobots in our bloodstream formonitoring our health, or perhaps internet-enabled contact lenses.

"Tracking chips will become the size of a pin-head," Gerd continues, "and they will connect to your always-on internetdevicesuch as smart watches orwimaxnetworks in major cities." The futurist believes that the economic incentives behind connecting everything to the internet (internet of things) will make the microchipping inevitable. Gerd sees this as an extension of the Quantified Self movement and what he calls the global brain. While this may be heaven for some, Gerd points out, it could be hell for others.

Quantified Self or Quantified Slaves?

Gerd believes that microchipping could be considered normal after the process is viewed as easier and less evasive. What people are most concerned about, however, is being forced into having technology embedded into their skin by an employer. "Would you rather be wired or fired?," states Gerd, imagining a futurewhere under the guise of efficiency and securitycompanies will require employees to be microchipped.

While microchipping would have some obvious security and efficiency benefits, Gerd mentions the irresistible temptation that employers may have is utilizing the technology to track one's whereabouts, patterns, and perhaps direct datafrom the body (is the employee stressed? Depressed? Sick?). In order to ensure that microchipping technology is not abused by employers, Gerd recommends proactive legislation to consider the privacy concerns and ramificationsof its usage.

Is Microchipping an Upgrade or Downgrade?

"I think we have nothing to gain from a complete symbiosis of man and machine," states Gerd, "and we will everything to lose." What he sees as a folly is our pursuit of trying totranscend humanity, as opposed to agreements on new digital rights. With luminaries such as Elon Musk stating that we need to merge with machines, it is clear to see this will be a hotly contested issue in the years to come.

Gerd's summarizes his positions on technology versus humanity by stating, "embrace technology but don't become it."

Perhaps asserting our humanity is the ultimate upgrade.

===

Want to connect? Reach out @TechEthicistand onFacebook. Exploring the ethical, legal, and emotional impact of social media & tech.

Read this article:

Turning Cyborg. You May be Microchipped in the Future. - Big Think

A Brief Look at Cyborgs in Film – Chapelboro.com

Ghost in the Shell, a live-action adaptation of the manga and subsequent anime of thesame name,is currently making the rounds in theaters. The film follows the metaphysical exploits of Major Motoko Kusanagi, a cyborg law enforcement operative in the high-tech, low-life fictional future prefecture of Niihama, Japan. The Major, as played by Scarlett Johansson, is the latest in a rich canon of films featuring cybernetic beings. Let us take a moment today to look back at a few great moments in cyborg cinema, as we pay tribute to a few semi-mechanical heroes

To clarify, a cyborg is any combination of a human being and a machine. They can take many forms, from a person with a single robotic part such as the villainous Donald Pierce and his robotic arm in the recent Logan to full robotic bodies with human brains and minimal other parts.

Regardless of their level of humanity, storytellers and audiences alike are fascinated with cyborgs. The earliest fictional cyborg can be found in Edgar Allen Poes short story The Man Who Was Used Up. Written in 1843, the story follows a man injured so extensively in battle that most of his body is made up of elaborate mechanical parts.

Films did not receive their first cyborg until almost a hundred years later in the beloved 1939 film the Wizard of Oz, featuring the Tin Man. While not generally thought of as a cyborg, the Tin Man as detailed in the various Oz books and plays was once a normal man, named Nick Chopper. He was chopped to pieces by an enchanted axe and his damaged body was forced to reside in a heartless metal suit. The Tin Man and his quest to find a heart was the precursor to countless other cyborgs in search of heart and humanity.

One of the most popular settings for cyborg characters is the cold reaches of outer space. Out among the stars, cyborgs have filled every role imaginable, from feckless heroes to remorseless villains. On the side of good we have the likes of Geordi La Forge, from Star Trek: The Next Generation, which ran from 1987-1994. La Forge and the crew of the Enterprise-D often faced off against a cybernetic hive mind called the Borg, an army of brainwashed cyborgs that think and act as one.

The most famous spacefaring cyborg is unquestionably Darth Vader. Sith lord, estranged father and pop-culture icon. A combination of a robotic suit and fallen hero, Darth Vader is both awe-inspiring and terrifying whenever and wherever he appears. His iconic mask, raspy machine-assisted breath and his booming voice provided by the great James Earl Jones all cement his status as one of the greatest cyborgs in all of fiction.

Arguably the best part of any story in which he appears, the Sith lord has been iconic from the second he strode on screen in 1977. A recent cameo appearances in Rouge One: A Star Wars Story put him squarely back in the limelight after decades of appearances in novels, comics, and more parodies than can be counted. He uttered one of the most famous (and most misquoted) lines in cinematic history, occupies the roles of both villain and tragic hero, and is instantly recognizable to anyone that has had access to a television in the last three decades.

Vader is the last word in cybernetic villainy. Despite his evil appearance and actions, however, Vader still struggles with his lost humanity not unlike the Tin Man.

The protagonist of Ghost in the Shell, Major Motoko Kusanagi, is part of a long-standing tradition of cybernetic law enforcement in science fiction. There are countless cyborg cops, but a few manage to rise above the rest. Detective Spooner, from the 2004 I-Robot, is one such officer. Portrayed by Will Smith, Spooner is a robot-hating detective living in a distant future, where robots are common. He also happens to have a robotic arm. Aside from being a spectacular source of irony, the arm comes in handy during many of the films outrageous action scenes.

Of the many cybernetic law enforcers in popular culture, none are more iconic than RoboCop. Formerly a police officer named Alex Murphy who was killed on the job, RoboCop is the man-made-machine that combines equal parts ultraviolence, emotion and comedic effect for a cyborg that is more than the sum of his parts.

Aside from the original 1987 film by Paul Verhoeven that bears his name (a masterpiece) and its two sequels (not masterpieces), RoboCop has appeared in a number of television shows, both live action and animated, as well as a forgettable remake released a few years ago. Complete with killer catchphrases and an iconic look, RoboCop is ultimately brought to life by an all-time great performance by character actor Peter Weller. The original RoboCop movie remains relevant as a study in both pitch-black satire and over-the-top violence, but its the character of Alex Murphy/RoboCop that retains instant recognition.

Superhero stories have a long history with cyborgs, from villains like Doctor Octopus with his robotic arms to heroes like Iron Man, who walks around wearing a small arc-reactor on his chest. Filmgoers have also recently been introduced to the Winter Soldier, a brainwashed super-soldier with a robotic arm.

November will see the release of Justice League, a super-team extravaganza featuring a cyborg imaginatively named Cyborg. Cyborg has been an important part of the DC Comics universe since he was introduced in 1980. After a horrific interdimensional accident left teenager Victor Stone mutilated, his father outfits his broken body with experimental robotic parts to save his life. When Victor realizes that he cant return to his old life, he takes the name Cyborg and joins the Teen Titans, a team of young heroes and fellow outcasts. In recent years, Cyborg has been upgraded to the Justice League, DCs premier team of super heroes.

Outside of comics, Cyborg appeared in the well-received animated show Teen Titans, as well as its comically-focused successor Teen Titans Go! He is set to make his big-screen debut this fall in Justice League.

Decades after the Tin Man first pined for a heart, Hollywood is still putting out movies featuring part-human, part-robot characters searching for love, acceptance and the occasional criminal/rebel/alien to battle. From television and comics to video games and podcasts, cyborgs are everywhere. They remain relevant for a simple reason: theyre fascinating. They are fascinating because as we march further into the future and cybernetics become more reality than science fiction, cyborgs and their stories force us to ask where the robot ends, where the person begins, and whether the tin men of the future will have hearts.

Read more:

A Brief Look at Cyborgs in Film - Chapelboro.com

How Ghost in the Shell ducks the philosophical questions posed by a cyborg future – The Independent

How closely will we live with the technology we use in the future? How will it change us? And how close is close? Ghost in the Shell imagines a futuristic, hi-tech but grimy and ghetto-ridden Japanese metropolis populated by people, robots, and technologically-enhanced human cyborgs.

Beyond the superhuman strength, resilience, and X-ray vision provided by bodily enhancements, one of the most transformative aspects of this world is the idea of brain augmentation, that as cyborgs we might have two brains rather than one. Our biological brain the ghost in the shell would interface via neural implants to powerful embedded computers that would give us lightning fast reactions and heightened powers of reasoning, learning and memory.

First written as a Manga comic series in 1989 during the early days of the internet, Ghost in the Shells creator, Japanese artist Masamune Shirow, foresaw that this brain-computer interface would overcome the fundamental limitation of the human condition: that our minds are trapped inside our heads. In Shirows transhuman future our minds would be free to roam, relaying thoughts and imaginings to other networked brains, entering via the cloud into distant devices and sensors, even deep diving the mind of another in order to understand and share their experiences.

Johansson as Major in Rupert Saundersnew film which superimposes the myth of the American all-action hero on a character who is the antithesis of that idea(Paramount)

Shirows stories also pinpointed some of the dangers of this giant technological leap. In a world where knowledge is power, these brain-computer interfaces would create new tools for government surveillance and control, and new kinds of crime such as mind-jacking the remote control of anothers thoughts and actions. Nevertheless there was also a spiritual side to Shirows narrative: that the cyborg condition might be the next step in our evolution, and that the widening of perspective and the merging of individuality from a networking of minds could be a path to enlightenment.

Borrowing heavily from Ghost in the Shells re-telling by director Mamoru Oshii in his classic 1995 animated film version, the newly arrived Hollywood cinematic interpretation stars Scarlett Johansson as Major, a cyborg working for Section 9, a government-run security organisation charged with fighting corruption and terrorism. Directed by Rupert Sanders, the new film is visually stunning and the storyline lovingly recreates some of the best scenes from the original anime.

Sadly though, Sanders movie pulls its punches around the core question of how this technology could change the human condition. Indeed, if casting Western actors in most key roles wasnt enough, the new film also engages in a form of cultural appropriation by superimposing the myth of the American all-action hero who you are is defined by what you do on a character who is almost the complete antithesis of that notion.

The Japanese artistMasamuna Shirowcreated the Manga comic series in 1989(Rex)

Major fights the battles of her masters with increasing reluctance, questioning the actions asked of her, drawn to escape and contemplation. This is no action hero, but someone trying to piece together fragments of meaning from within her cyborg existence with which to assemble a worthwhile life.

A scene midway through the film shows, even more bluntly, the central role of memory in creating the self. We see the complete breakdown of a man who, having been mind-jacked, faces the realisation that his identity is built on false memories of a life never lived, and a family who never existed. The 1995 anime insists that we are individuals only because of our memories. While the new film retains much of the same story line, it refuses to follow the inference. Rather than being defined by our memories, Majors voice tells us that we cling to memories as if they define us, but what we do defines us. Perhaps this is meant to be reassuring, but to me it is both confusing and unfaithful to the spirit of the original tale.

ShirowsManga comic series claimed thecyborg future could be a path to enlightenment(Rex)

The new film also backs away from another key idea of Shirows work, that the human mind even the human species is, in essence, information. Where the 1995 anime talked of the possibility of leaving the physical body the shell elevating consciousness to a higher plane and becoming part of all things, the remake has only veiled hints that such a merging minds, or a melding of the human mind with the internet, could be either positive or transformational.

In the real world, the notion of networked minds is already upon us. Touchscreens, keypads, cameras, mobile, the cloud: we are more and more directly and instantly linked to a widening circle of people, while opening up our personal lives to surveillance and potential manipulation by governments, advertisers, or worse.

Brain-computer interfaces are also on their way. There are already brain implants that can mitigate some of the symptoms of brain conditions, from Parkinsons disease to depression. Others are being developed to overcome sensory impairments such as blindness or to control a paralysed limb. On the other hand, the remote control of behaviour using implanted brain stimulators has been demonstrated in several animal species, a frightening technology that could be applied to humans if someone were to choose to misuse it in that way.

The possibility of voluntarily networking our minds is also here. Devices like the Emotiv are simple wearable EEG-based devices that can detect some of the signature electrical signals emitted by our brains, and are sufficiently intelligent to interpret those signals and turn them into useful output. For example, an Emotiv connected to a computer can control a videogame by the power of the wearers thoughts alone.

In terms of artificial intelligence, the work in my lab at Sheffield Robotics explores the possibility of building robot analogues of human memory for events and experiences. The fusion of such systems with the human brain is not possible with todays technology but it is imaginable in the decades to come. Were an electronic implant developed that could vastly improve your memory and intelligence, would you be tempted? Such technologies may be on the horizon, and science fiction imaginings such as Ghost in the Shell suggest that their power to fundamentally change the human condition should not be underestimated.

Tony Prescott is professor of Cognitive Neuroscience and director of the Sheffield Robotics Institute, University of Sheffield. This article was originally published on The Conversation.

See more here:

How Ghost in the Shell ducks the philosophical questions posed by a cyborg future - The Independent

Cyborg cockroaches called biobots are the latest search and rescue technology – The Plaid Zebra (blog)

Cyborg cockroaches called biobots are the latest search and rescue technology

BY: DUSTIN BATTY

Rescuing survivors from a collapsed structure is an extremely dangerous endeavour. Because of the uncertain stability of the disaster area, rescue efforts are risky for everyone involved. The rescuers are in danger of falling through an unstable section of the structure, and the survivors are in danger of the structure further collapsing on top of them. For this reason, it is crucial that survivors be located as precisely as possible before the rubble is moved, to minimize the chance of further collapses or accidents.

Rescue teams are already equipped with some tools that help them locate survivors. According to the Phoenix Regional Standard Operating Procedures, these tools include search canines (if available), and specialty search equipment such as search cameras and acoustic listening devices. An IRIS article adds a thermal image camera system, which shows areas of body heat, and a carbon dioxide analyzer, which helps [them] detect people who might be unconscious but still breathing to the list of currently available tech.

Despite all of these techniques, locating survivors with precision can still be difficult. To help solve this problem, researchers in North Carolina have been developing biobots, a fancy term for cyborg cockroaches. The cockroaches have been augmented with a wireless computer system that inputs directional signals into the insects brain, making it turn left or right, or go forward. The cybernetic component also uses very precise locating technology that keeps track of exactly where the biobot is at any given time.

These remote control cockroaches are able to safely get into small or unstable spaces and explore the area. The major hurdle that researchers are currently attempting to overcome is the fact that the people in control of the biobots will not know the layout of the collapsed structure. This means that the biobots will have to explore the structure without precise input. As a Science Daily article explains, researchers have found that, when left to wander on their own, the cockroaches prefer to stay near the walls rather than exploring the open space. In attempting to overcome this difficulty, the researchers discovered that the insects were much more likely to explore the open space if they were given frequent random directional commands. This technique shows promise for practical application in collapsed structures.

Using these directional commands and their precise locator technology, a swarm of these biobots could quickly create a map of the interior of a collapsed structure, providing invaluable information that could help rescue efforts become much safer. Edgar Lobaton, one of the co-authors of the research papers, said that the map provided by a swarm of biobots would be of practical use for helping to locate survivors after a disaster, finding a safe way to reach survivors, or for helping responders determine how structurally safe a building may be.

As crazy as it might sound, it looks like cyborg cockroaches may become a staple of future disaster area rescue efforts.

Tagged: biobots, collapsed structures, cybernetics, cyborg cockroaches, disaster areas, search and rescue, technology

More here:

Cyborg cockroaches called biobots are the latest search and rescue technology - The Plaid Zebra (blog)

Cris Cyborg not waiting for Germaine de Randamie, wants … – MMAmania.com

All clear.

Cristiane Justino is ready to say goodbye to the 140-pound catchweight fights once and for all and recently informed Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) that shes prepared to make her debut in the newly-created featherweight division.

With or without reigning 145-pound titleholder Germaine de Randamie.

Better late than never.

If Iron Lady is unable to heal up in time for a Cyborg fight, thanks to damage sustained in her UFC 208 win over Holly Holm last month in Brooklyn, New York, then Justino will settle for whoever has the courage to step up.

Are we going to find an opponent? I believe the UFC has the capability to make that happen, no doubt in my mind, head coach Jason Parillo told FanSideds Extra Rounds Podcast. We cant sit on the shelf and wait. It doesnt do us no good to sit back. Who knows how long wed have to wait on that too.

I hear this featherweight has nothing to do next month.

Read more:

Cris Cyborg not waiting for Germaine de Randamie, wants ... - MMAmania.com

Mars, Tomb of Futurism: The Hopes of Success Are Dependent on Cyborg Humans – Futurism

Tend Your Own Garden

If immortality is the Holy Grail of Futurism then the colonization of Mars is its Holy Sepulchrea big empty tomb. Both attract their pilgrims: the former is a fairytale; the latter is a real place just out of reach, a sort of tantalizing inspiration to hungry dreamers everywhere salivating for land that doesnt belong to them. These days, from the promises of Elon Musk to the heroics of Matt Damon, we positively fetishize Mars. Yet my advice to the 11th century crusader and the 21st century Martian colonist would be the same: tend your own garden.

Im afraid that this is blasphemy from someone who calls himself a Transhumanist. After all, the colonization of space is tangentially connected enough to other themes associated with technological progress that theyre ordinarily all lumped together under the general banner of Futurism. In an increasingly divisive political climate, the promises of SpaceX and Mars One shine like the hope of some long-awaited escape from ourselves.

More fundamentally, the allure of space colonization is at the heart of some of our most beloved cultural narratives, shaping the aspirations of explorers since the first days of NASA and the Soviet Space Program. Even the earliest films lionized astronauts. The moon landing was the greatest collective lived experience of the twentieth century, this perfect human achievement more majestic than the pyramids and just as pointless only to the cynical.

Today, we might not have cities on the moon, but the fruits of space programs enrich our lives immeasurably. And given our recklessness when it comes to the fragile environment of this planet, perhaps we could use another world as a backup, just in case. We already have the technology to achieve the goal of getting to Mars, though for a perfect storm of reasons, it has yet to happen. But isnt getting there a worthy goal? And wont the journey there (and not only the physical journey, but the technical refinements forged along the way) benefit the cause of Progress with a capital P? Then what the hell am I complaining about?

My intention here isnt to trash space exploration or regale you with clickbait about the top eleven reasons why the colonization of Mars would be a tragic mistake at this juncture in time. However, I want to seriously problematize the prospective colonization, if youll excuse a word that academics tend to overuse. I dont want to focus on the hackneyed and frankly shortsighted idea that the money spent on getting to Mars could be better employed for services here on earth.

My critique has to do with the repercussions of contemporary attitudes about the seemingly unrelated topics of imperialism in outer space on the one hand and Transhumanism on the other. Cultural prejudices enshrining heroic astronauts blazing across the sky and mad scientists forging abominations pose serious problems for Transhumanists of all stripes and would-be Martian colonists alike.

If the predominant image of space colonizers enshrined in our zeitgeist is heroic pioneers soaring across the galaxy in the name of science and adventure, the narratives surrounding genetic engineering and cyborgs are positively apocalyptic by comparisonjust think of Frankenstein, the Terminator, and GATTACA.

The reasons for this difference in our intuitions are varied. They partly have to do with the genealogy of our ideas about imperialism in outer space, which are grounded in discourse about the benefits of the exploration and exploitation of underdeveloped foreign lands, exotic travelogues, Cold War propaganda, epic films, etc. They also have to do with the attitudes that surround Transhumanism, grounded in skepticism about discredited fields like galvanism, the abuses of the eugenicists, deep-seated fears surrounding physiological dislocation and dismemberment, etc.

The end result of all this discourse is that, right now in the popular imagination, would-be cyborgs are monsters and would-be Martian colonists are heroes. Lets take it for granted that the exploration of Mars would provide net benefits for society at large. Nevertheless, whether from the vantage point of someone who wants to investigate Mars and preserve its landscape (lets call this the environmentalist perspective) or someone who wants to colonize and terraform it (the imperialist perspective, which incidentally seems to completely dominate the environmentalist one), the problem inherent in this tension is immense.

First, imagine you were an environmentalist who felt strongly against the radical transformation of Mars. Your reasons might be varied. To you, the urge to dominate nature with the clutter of terrestrial civilization might seem arrogant and intrusive. True, there are no indigenous Martians to despoil. But the process of terraforming the planets surface would still seem to be hugely rapacious.

Imagine drowning its pristine scarlet valleys in water and clouding its translucent atmosphere with chemicals. Wouldnt even the most single-minded developer preserve some of the planets original landscape rather than transform it all? Doesnt this intuition concede that there is inherent value and beauty in the wild state of the place? If advanced aliens exist within visitable distance of our planet, they are evidently the type to silently observe or ignore us rather than actively intervene in our affairs. How primitive it might seem to them that our conception of space travel in 2017 is still bound to the small-minded earthly impulse to barge in, dominate nature, and claim random parcels of it as our own.

From this perspective, the only visits to Mars should be undertaken for the sake of exploration rather than colonization. The best agents to do so would be robots and cyborgs rather than unenhanced human beings, whose imprint on the environment would be immense by comparison. Yet until the development of cyborgs, we are doomed to either only know Mars indirectly or permanently scar its landscape as successive generations of pioneers perish on its inhospitable surface.

Now, consider the imperialist perspective. To you, between climate change, nuclear war, plague, and pestilence, the existential threats to human civilization are great enough that you feel we need to colonize Mars as soon as possible or face the potential extermination of civilization as we know it. The preservation of the beauty of nature is all well and good, after all, but human interests come first.

Yet the conditions on Mars for the colonizers would be like something out of Dante; indeed, the first Martian immigrants should be prepared to die, warns Elon Musk.

As it is, we cant even control the weather yet here on Earth, let alone create a colony on another planet with an inhospitable atmosphere. The bright eyed and bushy tailed original colonists would be like Joseph Conrads Mr. Kurtz, fantasizing about the march of civilization but ending up the lonely dupes of capitalism wallowing in lunacy in a dark place where they shouldnt have ventured in the first place.

On closer reflection, the imperialist would realize that until it became feasible to travel to Mars on a mass scale, the original colonies could only remain pitiable outposts for misguided dying settlers and insanely rich tourists rather than anything like a safety net for civilization at large. The fastest and most efficient way to transform the landscape would be by the sweat of cyborgs. And yet ironically, with the advent of cyborgs, the need to terraform the environment to suit un-enhanced human needs would perhaps be moot.

While I might have misgivings about the subjugation of a planet ironically named for the god of conquest, I dont want to disparage a journey there as an admirable Futurist goal. But whether you are an advocate of peaceful exploration or large-scale colonization, the time has come to think realistically about the requisite intermediate steps. We need to make heroes of the pioneers who are willing to risk their lives and careers to overcome the hurdles on the way to our destination in this dark march toward whatever it is were approaching.

Cyborgs and space explorers are entirely akin in their willingness to risk their lives for the sake of challenging the boundaries of conceivability. Yet in 2017, we call volunteers for the journey to Mars heroes, and there are no volunteers at all for brain implants because no doctor would ever dream of performing such an operation or convening a conference to discuss plans for one.

If a prominent surgeon called for volunteers and warned, as Musk did, that they must be prepared to die, I wonder if the public would meet the declaration with the same resigned sigh in recognition of the heroism of all involved. The principle is precisely the same: a human life is at stake. Yet we are willing to sanctify the sacrificeof the astronaut and glorify him, but would rather reverse engineer a machine analogous to a human brain than implant a machine into one

Investment in Mars in the absence of Transhumanism as a vigorous social ideology doesnt necessarily come at the expense of Transhumanism, but it does come at the expense of the future of Mars. The most widespread current projections of the next century of human development imagine the needs of unenhanced humans predominating as a matter of course. Hence, long-term plans for Mars call for terraforming the planet to create a second Earth. Yet this limitation in our imaginations augurs great brutality and a great deal of human blood spilled along the way as we struggle to dominate conditions not meant for our bodies.

This, of course, does not mean I think there should be no exploration of Mars, or even that I am dead-set against eventual colonization. But I would hope that any such colonization would be undertaken in a spirit of great respect for nature, imposing upon it, let alone uprooting it, as little as possible. And I would also pray that the path toward colonization would be blazed with as few deaths as possible along the way.

Yet this can only take place after the ascendancy of Transhumanism and not a moment before it. For the time being, I would no more recommend a journey to Mars than I would a voyage across the Atlantic to an ancient Roman armed with nothing but a leaky triremeand his copy of Ptolemy.

David Vincent Kimel is a doctoral student in History at Yale. Connect with him on Twitter and Instagram (spqrkimel). Visit his blog at earthasitis.com.

Follow this link:

Mars, Tomb of Futurism: The Hopes of Success Are Dependent on Cyborg Humans - Futurism

Cris Cyborg Says She’s Ready to Fight Again | champions.co – champions.co

When Cris "Cyborg" Justino was cleared by USADA of her anti-doping issues, everyone had hoped a fight between her and the UFC women's featherweight champion, Germaine de Randamie, would be scheduled. After all, it was Cyborg that had campaigned for the division to be built in the first place. But de Randamie doesn't seem all the eager to face off with the powerhouse ... and who could blame her?

Now that Cris has recovered from two severe weight cuts, she says she it ready to return to the Octagon with or without Germaine.

Germaine has been insistent on a rematch with former UFC bantamweight champion, Holly Holm, after defeating her to become the first women's featherweight champion amid controversy and accusations of an unfair fight. She has also said that if she is not going to rematch Holly, she will be taking time off to have surgery.

What I heard in her speech after her fight, she already pre-meditated everything that happened in that, said Jason Parillo, Cyborg's head coach, on FanSideds Extra Rounds Podcast. As soon as Cris Cyborgs name came up, she went straight to hand surgery. I dont blame her. Ill be honest with you; I dont blame her. I dont blame any girl for not wanting to fight Cris Cyborg.

Cyborg had been offered the title shot initially, but due to medical issues has to turn down the fight. She was later flagged by USADA due to a medication she was prescribed to recover from two back to back tough weight cuts. She was cleared of any wrongdoing earlier this year.

But with Cris finally recovered and cleared to return to Octagon, she, and her coach, don't want to be waiting around for the champion.

"We cant sit on the shelf and wait," Parillo said. "It doesnt do us no good to sit back. Who knows how long wed have to wait on that too."

Cris has not fought since Septemeber when she defeated Lina Lansberg at UFC Fight Night 95 via a second round TKO.

Read the original here:

Cris Cyborg Says She's Ready to Fight Again | champions.co - champions.co

Amanda Nunes’ plans for second UFC title reign don’t include Cris … – CBSSports.com

UFC bantamweight champion Amanda Nunes goal of becoming the first female fighter in company history to win titles in multiple weight classes remains. Whether she plans to act on that goal, however, apparently depends upon who is holding the 145-pound title.

Nunes, 28, has stated her preference is to face UFC womens featherweight champion Germaine de Randamie (7-3), who defeated Holly Holm for the inaugural title in a disputed decision at UFC 208 in February.

It was Nunes (14-4), of course, who finished de Randamie by first-round TKO in their 2013 bantamweight bout. But asked by a group of media members on Tuesday while vacationing in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, whether she would be just as willing to challenge for the belt if fellow Brailizan Cris Cyborg Justino was wearing it, Nunes switched gears.

Cris is a huge for 145; Im little for 135, Nunes said in an interview captured by MMAFighting.com. In order to fight Cris Cyborg, I would have to train at a specific weight to get more muscles and be stronger. This takes time to do.

The champion right now is Germaine de Randamie. I have fought Germaine before and she is for my weight class. Thats why I want to go up because I have beat her before and know I can beat her.

Justino (17-1), the current Invicta FC featherweight champion, made her long-awited UFC debut last May, winning a pair of bouts against Leslie Smith and Lina Lansberg at catchweights of 140 pounds. But the former Strikeforce champion turned down multiple UFC offers to fight for the inaugural 145-pound title, claiming she needed more time to train and cut weight.

This is the thing -- I want to see Cris Cyborg as [UFC] champion, Nunes said. She is deserving. She is a warrior like me and [the featherweight] division is open for her. She has taken days off, and I know she is going to come back. If she is taking a long time [to return], I want to go up and fight Germaine. But if Cris comes back, I really want to see Cris as champion.

Nunes captured the bantamweight title by knocking out Miesha Tate at UFC 200 in July before coming back with an emphatic 48-second dismantling of a returning Ronda Rousey at UFC 207 in December. But shes likely to have her hands full within her own division in the near future thanks to Valentina Shevchenko, who is fresh off a pair of impressive wins against Holly Holm and Julianna Pena.

Shevchenko (14-2), 28, lost a three-round decision to Nunes last March at UFC 196. But the native of Russian appeared to figure things out in the final round and rallied late to give Nunes all she could handle.

Last month, the typically all-business Shevchenko shared with TMZ Sports her opinion that Nunes is looking for any reason to avoid a rematch. Nunes rejected the notion, saying she has plans to sit down with the UFC and discuss her next step upon her return to the United States.

Im on vacation right now and Im never going to stop enjoying this moment to come back and fight because Valentina wants, Nunes said. Its not like that.

I love this rematch. I love to see Valentina like that because she never was like that, to talk a lot. Im excited to be back in training and see what is next. I will fight her. If she is next, I dont have any problem.

Read the original here:

Amanda Nunes' plans for second UFC title reign don't include Cris ... - CBSSports.com

Metal Gear Solid movie director talks Cyborg Ninja, Sniper Wolf, fourth wall moments, and more – GamesRadar

The Metal Gear Solid movie will feature a character near and dear to director Jordan Vogt-Roberts' heart, at least if he has anything to say about it. While promoting his new movie Kong: Skull Island, Vogt-Roberts told IGN that "there's no world" in which he directs a Metal Gear Solid movie that doesn't have Gray Fox, AKA the Cyborg Ninja.

"When we were sitting down to think about the script at a certain point it was like, 'Is Cyborg Ninja in this movie or not?' And the part of me that was a little kid was like, 'There's no world in which I'm ever going to make a Metal Gear movie that Cyborg Ninja is not going to be in.' It's really easy to be like, 'It's a good character to save for the second one,' but no, no, no."

Vogt-Roberts also called himself "a big fan" of Sniper Wolf, so the beautiful-but-deadly sharpshooter may also make an appearance.

Other fan-favorite moments from the PlayStation game may not make it to film, however. Many players to this day remember the shock they felt at being addressed directly by Psycho Mantis as he read the contents of an inserted memory card. But fourth wall shenanigans aren't high on Vogt-Roberts' priorities.

"To me, the fourth wall breaking is a little less important than the walking philosophies and ideologies those characters represent, and getting that right and the tone right and things like that," Vogt-Roberts said. "If breaking the fourth wall makes sense, I'm all for it, [but] I'm more interested in the 'Kojima conversations' about whatever song came out then or whatever - it's that stuff that it just absolutely needs."

And what does Kojima himself think of all this? Well, he's a fan of Kong: Skull Island, at least.

I don't know about you, but that's all the endorsement I needed to see Kong this weekend and be hyped for development of the MGS movie to continue.

Seen something newsworthy? Tell us!

More here:

Metal Gear Solid movie director talks Cyborg Ninja, Sniper Wolf, fourth wall moments, and more - GamesRadar

Megan Anderson: One Day Cris Cyborg and I Will Fight and I’ll Take Her Place – MMAWeekly (blog)


MMAWeekly (blog)
Megan Anderson: One Day Cris Cyborg and I Will Fight and I'll Take Her Place
MMAWeekly (blog)
Invicta FC interim featherweight champion Megan Anderson held a scrum with reporters at UFC 209, where, not surprisingly, the focus quickly centered on a potential fight with Cris Cyborg Justino and the development of the women's 145-pound division ...

The rest is here:

Megan Anderson: One Day Cris Cyborg and I Will Fight and I'll Take Her Place - MMAWeekly (blog)