
Mark Zuckerberg has already mentioned this in an interview: “I believe that one day we will be able to send detailed thoughts to each other using technology. You just have to think about something and your friends will be able to experience the same thing right away.”
“I believe that one day we will be able to send detailed thoughts to each other using technology. You just have to think about something and your friends will be able to experience the same thing right away.”
Mark Zuckerberg mentioned this in an earlier interview.
Business Insider siphoned several job postings from the super-secret 'Building 8' group close to Facebook, one of which included project-related keywords such as “imaging” or “electrophysiological data” and the “communication platform of the future” was at the heart of the work. In another, a Ph.D. neuroscientist was sought for two years, while in the third, an engineer specializing in the development of audio signal processing algorithms would have been hired to build “the communication and computing platform of the future.”
We can't be sure, but it looks like Zuckerberg is gathering a team with him to implement his 2015 statement.
Things around Building 8 are still covered in a dense fog, but all signs point to us being lucky with a company focused on world-redeeming ideas and products that resemble the formerly Google-related Alphabet X. On the other hand, Facebook has revealed to the public its secret department, with which it intends to continue its mission, that is, to connect the world. All we know for sure is that last April, Facebook lured Regina Dugan from Google, which raises further questions about Building 8 and Facebook's new project: Upon Dugan's arrival, she was appointed to lead the development of “technologies that sweep the physical and digital worlds.” Like, hmm, sending status updates by reading brainwaves, maybe?
As Messenger chatbot developers, we are eagerly awaiting Facebook's next big launch. Might it not be such a distant future that companies also reach their customers with thoughts?
Source: Bryan Clark TheNextWeb