We're getting tantalizingly close to Repo: The Genetic Opera
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There is an escape-room puzzle with this concept, I can feel it.
God please don't tell me it's on the 2.4 GHz band, last thing I'd want is my hand to start getting weird near a smart house or a set of traffic lights.

That much closer to automail
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That's cool and all, but remotely controlled could also become remotely controlled. I for one prefer to be the only one in charge of my limbs at all times.
Tightbeam line-of-sight IR laser should be the only way to control stuff like this. And I realize that means I can't control my hands if they are in another room, which is a delta of 0 from the current human condition.
Why not just an electrical connection?
I'm sure it does some sort of security handshaking when you connect

I'm sure everything secure has 0 exploits
Whoosh!
The L in Lemmy stands for "Literal".
Now I'm picturing the hand asking how many fingers it's holding up.
Just the middle one.
If a full robot body were available, I’d jump on it right away, but ONLY if it has absolutely no way to wirelessly communicate. Absolutely the sole way of interacting with the software would be a single USB port inside a panel in the body with a physical lock.
There's a pretty good movie to be made here.
B plot has a bunch of injured vets, many with these limbs, picketing congress and marching around inside the offices trying to petition lawmakers about getting benefits that they're owed but are being stalled by budget talks.
A plot could be a spy thriller, John C Everyman investigating evil tech bro over whatever nonsense. Finds out all too late that the evil tech bro owns the company manufacturing those limbs, and wants to install a puppet government. The only way to stop them is to literally shut them all off remotely. The vets are running all over, unable to stop themselves, attempting to lock down and assassinate representatives.
Everything resolves as hundreds of injured veterans literally fall limp all over the halls of Congress. The media eats up the protest, the vets get their benefits, John C Everyman goes on to pick up another case. Evil Tech bro lives to plot again. Or dies being ripped to shreds by his own limbs. Who cares.
In reality, he'd live to plot again and suffer no consequences.
Good thing this is fiction :)
Also, extra points if the movie ends by replacing the proprietary backdoored software with Linux :P imagine having prosthetic cyberlegs and being able to say you run on Arch (btw)
Yeah that'll be an Easter egg joke at the beginning of the movie. There'll be a guy jogging on the national Mall talking to his jogging partner about how he jailbroke his limbs and now he runs on Arch. He'll still be jogging at the end of the movie.
Maybe he could show up in a critical moment to save the day?
What if someone hacks your hand "stop hitting yourself"
I doubt it's connected
Of course it is, you can see her controlling it wirelessly.
Unless you mean "connected to the Internet", which has nothing to do with the ability to hack it.
They're creepy and they're cooky, mysterious and spooky, they're all together ooky, and now they finally have their last family memeber. What an interesting Thing.
I think if you survive the tragedy of losing a limb, the world owes you the opportunity to get super bionic arms that can work remotely.
I've lost my penis in the war. I'd like an exact replica prostetic please! That's right, 12 inches, thick as a beer can. I said exact replica after all!
Oh, and since it's prostetic anyways, maybe we can build it with vibration, and led gamer lights? Oooh! Ooh!!! And make it shoot off fireworks! And make a laser light show that reacts to music!!!
What? I said exact replica! My penis could do all this already!
12 inches, thick as a beer can
That can be only handled by a select few. I personally like the feeling of overcoming large objects, others are not as amused by that. Larger objects are also accelerating the recipient's time for adult diapers, especially if done daily. 4-6 inches are better for most people.
12 inches, thick as a beer can
Ouch
This is very much in the realm of it has to work pretty perfectly to be worth the fuss. As neat as these are most people prefer the simple dumb prosthetics as they are predictable and reliable. The fuss and imperfections and charging etc that come with these make them look cool in demos but most people abandon them in trials.
Yeah.... Prosthetic companies spend lots of money on marketing to make people think we've advanced a lot further than we have.
Myoelectric limbs have been around for decades, and though the terminal devices have gotten more life-like, it's arguable if they've gotten any more functional.
Myoelectric limbs are just exhausting to use for more than a couple minutes at a time. You have to concentrate and flex individual muscle groups in your forearm to get a controlled response.
I have patients with mechanical upper limb prosthetics that are a lot more functional than I've ever seen anyone with a powered limb.
So... just like tech companies in general?
"From the moment I understood the weakness of my flesh, it disgusted me..."
I wonder how comfortable and easy to use they are. I know prosthetic weight can be a real source of frustration in long term use.
The APIs aren't crazy and they're really reactive. Pretty cool little dealies.
Ok, but like physically. Their structure weighs more than the musculoskeletal contraption they're replacing and more than simple hook or clamp prosthetics and I've heard actually controlling them can be tiring
Those usually aren't nerve controlled. If you have a stump left of the lower arm, sensors can detect muscle movement, and clenching your hand does move some muscles in your lower arm close to the elbow.
Source: My dad had a prosthetic left arm. His stump was similar to the ones in this video.
Finally. Someone who can roleplay as my favorite member of the Addam's Family.
The internet has been watching her grow up over the years and it’s crazy how natural those arms are to her now. She’s basically integrated them as part of herself.
Imagine living with her and suddenly a hand starts crawling towards you. Nope, I’m out, that’s some nightmare fuel
I think it would be very handy
(me calling out from the other room)
"Honey! You shouldn't have!"
