Cortical Labs made plenty of headlines last month when its latest hardware platform, the CL1, which uses living human neurons ...
Australian biological computing startup Cortical Labs has unveiled a biological data center prototype in Melbourne. The facility has been designed to process information using what the company calls ...
A computer platform that runs on human neurons (and recently showed off said neurons’ ability to play DOOM) now wants in on the data center boom. Australia-based Cortical Labs announced today that it ...
DayOne and Cortical Labs announced plans to build Singapore’s first biological data centre, the first of its kind outside Australia.
Cortical Labs is building two data centres that will house its neuron-filled chips. The technology is still in the very early stages of development ...
Sapiens AI develops Agnes AI, a consumer-facing platform targeting emerging markets including Indonesia, the Philippines, ...
Millions of human neurons are powering a new data centre in Melbourne – the first in the world to be powered by living brain cells. Launched on Tuesday by local startup Cortical Labs, the prototype ...
DayOne will trial wetware computing with Cortical Labs and NUS, while BDx implements IMDA’s tropical data centre standard to cut cooling demand.
Instead of racks of servers running on conventional processors, the facilities will house biological computers known as CL1 units, powered by human brain cells.
DayOne and Cortical Labs are bringing ‘wetware’ computing to the city-state, using living neurons grown from stem cells to support the demand for AI while addressing sustainability concerns ...
Scientists have successfully connected living human brain cells to a computer system and taught them to interact with the classic video game DOOM. The strange experiment marks a new step toward ...
Initial deployment will involve a single rack of 20 Cortical Cloud units at NUS, with a view to expanding to a full-scale DayOne commercial data centre in Singapore. The partners envision a phased ...