JokerFight wrote...
Nano-tech maybe can be used to implant data into the human brain by putting the nano chip in the first place.
If this is possible,humans don't have to go to school in the first place.Just transfer the information to the brain and you have mastered the knowledge 100 percent.This is very useful as it can save costs and resources.
In a minute, you could be as genius as Einstein.
Sigh... once again, this has
nothing to do with
nanotech. We already have chips small enough that you could store insane quantities of data on it and we're not using nanotech. In fact the brain operates with structures that are similar in size to existing microchip architecture. Nanotech is lot-lot smaller than that.
Going back to the original premise of the post (ignoring the gross mismatch in scale), if all we did was connect a computer to the brain that could recall data, that wouldn't be any different than having a big encyclopedia at hand at all times. This won't make one smart, skilled of knowledgeable. Wikipedia didn't turn us into Einsteins.
For that we'd need to implant actual knowledge instead mere data. The problem is that we don't (yet) know how the brain stores such information. What we do now, is that actually the human brain cheats a lot. Instead storing raw data, it tends to break things down into distinct impression, only focusing on key qualities and when you recall stuff that brain reassembles these into something (hopefully) coherent.
...however we still don't know how it does this. We haven't pinned down what areas of the brain do what tasks in this process. We finally do know, that memories aren't localized and various parts of the brain process different sorts of information.
So yeah, once again this area has nothing to do with (applied) nano-technology.
Please, stop posting about random sci-fiction wonders and saying nano-tech will make it true! Nano-technology is no silver bullet, it won't magically solve all the research and engineering problems we face... so please think before you post and doing a little research can do a lot for making informed, intelligent posts.