The Chips
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Active from | 1956 |
---|---|
Members | Nathaniel Epps |
Paul Fulton | |
Shedrick Lincoln | |
Sammy Strain | |
Record labels | Parlophone |
Resnik Music Group | |
Genres | R&B/Soul |
Pop | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 2061806 |
About The Chips
The Chips were a short-lived New York City doo-wop vocal group consisting of teenage friends Charles Johnson, Nathaniel Epps, Paul Fulton, Sammy Strain and Shedrick Lincoln.
Wynne Evans: Challenges that inspired Celebrity MasterChef win
... The Chips are great...
Katty Kay: Why bad news is good news for Trump - for now
... Americans are still being squeezed by higher interest rates and the prices that remain above pre-Covid levels, but the president is travelling around the US this summer reminding people that key parts of his agenda, the Inflation Reduction Act and The Chips Act, have pumped trillions of government dollars into the US economy...
Madonna announces rescheduled dates for her Celebration tour
... " When The Chips were down my children really showed up for me...
Madonna feels 'lucky to be alive' after health scare
... " When The Chips were down my children really showed up for me...
Lean times hit the vertical farming business
... " The big challenge came with the chip shortage, " says Dr Meszaros, explaining how growing at one newly built facility was delayed by many months because Smartkas could not obtain The Chips it required for the safety systems in robots tasked with moving around trays of plants...
Neuralink: Why is Elon Musk's brain chip firm in the news?
... There has been extensive (and controversial) testing of The Chips on animals...
Neuralink: Elon Musk's brain chip firm says US approval won for human study
... The Chips - which have been tested in monkeys - are designed to interpret signals produced in the brain and relay information to devices via Bluetooth...
Critics say £1bn for UK chip industry not enough
... US support to its industry under The Chips Act totals $52bn, while the EU equivalent will amount to €43bn of aid...
Neuralink: Elon Musk's brain chip firm says US approval won for human study
By James FitzGeraldBBC News
Elon Musk's brain-chip firm says it has received approval from the US Food and Drugs Administration (FDA) to conduct its first tests on humans.
The Billionaire 's Neuralink implant Company wants to help restore people's vision and mobility by connecting brains with computers.
It says it does not have immediate plans to start recruiting participants. Mr Musk's previous ambitions to begin tests came to nothing.
The regulator itself is yet to comment.
An earlier bid by Neuralink to win FDA approval was rejected on safety grounds, according to a report in March by the Reuters news agency That cited multiple current and former employees.
Neuralink hopes to use its microchips to treat conditions such as paralysis and blindness, and to help certain disabled people use computers and mobile technology.
The Chips - which have been tested in monkeys - are designed to interpret signals produced in The Brain and relay information to devices via Bluetooth.
Mr Musk has also previously suggested That
, Neuralink talked of an " important first step That will One Day allow our technology to help many people".
The approval was " the result of incredible work by the Neuralink team in close collaboration with the FDA" it said.
The Firm promised more information " soon" on plans to sign up trial participants.
Its website promises That " safety, accessibility and reliability" are all priorities during its engineering process.
Experts have cautioned That Neuralink 's brain implants will require extensive testing to overcome technical and ethical challenges if they are to become widely available.
The Company - which was co-founded by Mr Musk in 2016 - has repeatedly overestimated the speed at which it can execute its plans.
Its initial aim was to start planting Chips in human brains in 2020, in order to honour a pledge made the year before. It later vowed to get started in 2022.
The Business was dealt another setback in December Last Year , after reportedly. It earlier.
Its announcement on FDA approval for human tests follows recent news of.
A paralysed man from the Netherlands was able to walk simply by thinking about it - thanks to a system of implants which wirelessly transmit his thoughts to his legs and feet.
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com