Showing posts with label Bees. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bees. Show all posts

Sunday, July 13, 2025

The new cyborg insects and spiders are coming.


"Illustration of mind-controlled bees equipped with the world's lightest brain controller, depicted as an artificial illustration."(RudeBaquette)

Microchip implants turn bees and other insects into spies. Those microchips allow the controllers to use a joystick to control things like bees. The cyborg insects can transport microchips to the bird’s and fish’s stomachs. And those things help to map their food and environmental threats. Things like flies can search bodies from the area. But the cyborg bees and insects can be used as reconnaissance and weapon tools. 

Robot insects can search people, and they can transport things like eavesdropping tools into rooms. And those things can transport very small eavesdropping microchips on the computers. Those systems can search and listen to data that travels in the computer’s wires. 

That is one of the things that the microchipped cyborg bugs can do. The thing is that those cyborg insect swarms can act as similar as drone swarms. Those microchips can share and receive data. And that allows those microchips to use cloud-based non-centralized data processing models. That kind of system can collect and process data. That makes those insects far away from the natural insects. 

But when we think about this technology more carefully those microchip-controlled insects can also act as biological robot weapons. They can transport microbes that destroy food or turn oil into powder. The last one could destroy the entire fuel storage. But cyborg bugs and spiders are things that can have multiple weapon solutions. 

What if some sniper or some other military operator gets the bee sting just at a critical moment? And the other thing that the weaponization of that technology allows authorities to do is to use the bee swarms as riot controllers. People like leaders in authoritarian states don’t care about the people’s safety and opinions. But there is a possibility that things like black widow spiders will be turned into biological weapons. The microchip-controlled spider can be a tool that makes some horror movies look like children’s games. 

The black widow is a very poisonous spider and that spider can cause death. And in the wrong hands implant technology can be more dangerous than we even dare to believe. Things like implanted snakes and other animals can be perfect assassination tools. And that is the thing that can interest people like Kim Jong-Un and his friends. The fact is that a new race of systems is born. Those systems are multitasking tools. And their developers and users determine where they want to use those systems. 

https://www.rudebaguette.com/en/2025/07/these-bees-are-now-spies-china-stuns-world-by-controlling-insects-with-ultra-light-brain-chips-igniting-fears-of-next-level-espionage/



Tuesday, September 5, 2023

Bees are making decisions more effectively than humans.

 Bees are making decisions more effectively than humans.


The reason why researchers are researching the bees' nervous system is simple. Researchers can use this kind of data can use to develop next-generation AI-based infrastructures. The CPU in non-centralized neural networks only delivers missions to the system. 

The idea is that the CPU (Central Processing Unit) delivers the mission to the sub-system. That can be the RISC (Reduced instruction set computer system). When we think about the human-looking robots, the pneumatic-hydraulic system and the microprocessors that control them are RISC systems. 

Many times before this researchers claim that insects make faster and more precise than humans. There are a couple of reasons why insects like bees make better decisions than humans. If we compare the bees to humans bees are like RISC operators. RISC-operator is a computer that has fewer actions than a regular PC. 

That makes RISC -devices more effective than PCs but their operational sector or skills are more limited than regular PCs have. If we compare a bee with a human that situation is similar as we compare a pocket calculator with a PC. We can make basic calculations faster if we use a pocket calculator. 

Then if we use a PC for that thing we need a computer program and the regular keyboard is not as fast as a pocket calculator. But a regular PC can do many other things. Then just calculate some basic calculations. The number of skills of that computer depends on the data and programs that it has access to. 

The bee has a limited number of skills. And that means there are not many choices that the bee's nervous system can use to select the necessary operations. In the bee's nervous system are not many neurons. And that means the bee must not go through about 100 billion neurons when the bee wants to make something. There are about 950,000 neurons in the bee's brain.

In the brain, the number of physical neurons is not important in the case of decisions. In the thinking process, the most important thing is how to interconnect memory cells into new virtual neurons that can interconnect their data together. 




"New research unveils the decision-making pathways in bee brains, shedding light on their ability to quickly and accurately assess flowers for nectar, which could inspire more autonomous robot designs. The study, led by various academic experts, also emphasizes the efficiency of evolutionarily refined insect brains that could guide future AI development in industries. Credit: Théotime Colin" (Researchers Discover That Bees Can Make Decisions Better and Faster Than We Do)


In reflexes, the position of those memory cells is more important. The thing that makes the reflex effective is the position of memory cells. If memory cells are close to muscle cells each of those cells includes multiple images. That thing makes them more effective. In this case, the net eyes of the bee send images to neurons. 

The image always activates neurons and it sends signals to muscles. The reason for multiple connections in a bee's brain is that the eyes send images to the memory cells. The thing that determines do the bee escapes or not is how many memory cells activate. So the bee's nervous system doesn't send anything back. 

All impulses travel in the same direction. And when they activate the neurons that control muscles, those cells send the signals to muscles anyway. That means some decisions that bees make are a series of reflexes. That causes the question: Do human thinking and human actions also series of reflexes? What if a bee has 200 billion reflexes?

But I don't know if that number is made by calculating physical neurons or if that number is obtained by calculating virtual neurons, which form when neurons interconnect with other neurons. There are more synaptic connections in bee's brains than in human brains. And my opinion is that. We should rather calculate virtual neurons than physical neurons. 

Every connection between the bee's brain cells same way as in the human brain gives a new state to that system. Theoretically is possible that researchers create a single neuron system that is as intelligent as humans. But that thing requires the neuron to have 300 billion circular connections where the axon is connected to that neuron itself. 

Bee's brains are acting in a similar way to human brains. There are memory cells. And every memory cell involves some sensorial data or reaction for those senses. Some other memory cells tell neurons and the router cells how they must send signals to the muscle cells. 

If we think that a bee has a limited number of actions. We can understand why it's so effective. We can think that all skills are memories. And memories are stored in some kind of warehouse. If the number of skills that bees have is like a book, the human has warehouse class skills and abilities. If we had only about 5 or four skills and we had to select from them the selection process would be very fast. But if we have 100 or more skills that gives a response to the event. 

That our senses send to us that thing takes far longer time than in the case that we have only 5 or fewer skills. All skills that humans have formed from sub-skills. So the network or the puzzle of neurons that form virtual neurons is making all our skills. Our skills are more complicated than some bees whose only mission is to find food and then return to the nest. So the only skill that the bee needs is how to find food. And then how to avoid the predators. 


https://scitechdaily.com/researchers-discover-that-bees-can-make-decisions-better-and-faster-than-we-do/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reduced_instruction_set_computer



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