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Input text directly from your brain

By | March 11, 2010, 8:51 AM PST

Tired of that mouse? Disappointed with your keyboard? Wouldn’t you like to just shoot those words onto the screen with the power of your brain?

Well, we’re about 5 years away from that thanks to Guger Technologies and their Intendix, which introduced its first brain-computer interface at CES this week.

The Intendix device is pricey, about $12,000, it’s limited to basic text input, and it’s designed for people who can’t communicate any other way. But with training a user can input a letter per second, enough to carry on a conversation and even write a blog.

Best of all, there’s the miracle known as Moore’s Law. Think of what happened with HDTV. What was a $10,000 device a few years ago is now cheap as chips, startling the burglars who take them from suburban homes and find there’s no longer a market for them.

Within five years, something like this will be available at popular prices.

Physically the device looks like one of those bathing caps Esther Williams wore in her movies, covered in sensors designed to pick up EEG waves. It will take software to adapt it for uses beyond text, to Web browsing and opening browser windows and letting someone replace me here at SmartPlanet.

But the first steps have been taken.

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Dana Blankenhorn

About Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn was a contributing editor for SmartPlanet from 2009 to 2010.

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn

Contributing Editor, Technology

Dana Blankenhorn has written for the Chicago Tribune, Advertising Age's "NetMarketing" supplement and founded the Interactive Age Daily for CMP Media. He holds degrees from Rice and Northwestern universities. He is based in Atlanta.

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Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn has been a technology reporter since 1982, a business reporter since 1978, and a writer for as long as he can remember. His Schwab IRA has a few tech stocks in it, most notably some Intel and Applied Materials bought over 10 years ago. But the vast majority of his tiny fortune (emphasis on the word tiny) is invested in mutual funds. He presently writes for no one else but ZDNet, SmartPlanet and himself. But if you've got an opportunity let him know. If he takes the gig he"ll first add it to this disclosure page.

He writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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