Sunday Apr 19, 2026

EP 37: Neurons: Future of AI Processing

What if the next generation of computers wasn't made of silicon — but of living human neurons? Not simulated neurons, not artificial neural networks inspired by biology, but actual brain cells grown in a lab, connected to electrodes, and used to process information. That's not science fiction anymore. It's happening right now at FinalSpark, a Swiss startup building the world's first remotely accessible biocomputing platform.

In this episode, Sam talks with Dr. Ewelina Kurtys, a neuroscientist with a PhD in brain imaging and a postdoctoral researcher at King's College London, about how living neurons could revolutionise computing — and why they use one million times less energy than silicon-based AI hardware.

 

  WHAT YOU'LL LEARN

  How FinalSpark was founded in 2014 by Fred Jordan and Martin Kutter — and why they pivoted from digital AI to biological computing when they realised the energy and cost problem was unsolvable with silicon

  Why 20 watts powers the human brain while silicon-based AI requires megawatts — and what that means for AI's sustainability crisis

  The difference between neurons as processors (not power sources) — a crucial distinction most people get wrong

  Why biological neural networks learn continuously while digital systems require full model updates — and what that means for energy efficiency

  The honest challenge: nobody yet knows exactly how neurons encode information — the biggest scientific hurdle in biocomputing right now

  How the I/O interface works: electrodes measuring neural spikes, analog-to-digital converters, researchers writing Python code to control neurons remotely

  The remote access breakthrough: researchers in Tokyo or Bristol can log in and control living neurons in Switzerland in real time via browser

  Why neurons won't outperform GPUs on speed: biocomputing specialises in efficiency and adaptability, not clock cycles

  FinalSpark's current stage: they've stored 1 bit of information and are collaborating with 9 universities on fundamental research

  The cost argument: even at 10× lower price than NVIDIA, biocomputers would still generate billions in profit due to energy and infrastructure savings

  Bioethics, consent, and regulation: how FinalSpark is working with philosophers now to establish ethical frameworks before biocomputing scales

  Why human-machine integration is not new: prosthetics, pacemakers, and smartphones are already blending biology and technology

  The hybrid computing future: silicon, quantum, and biocomputing will coexist, each doing what they do best

  The real game-changer: cheap, accessible AI for everyone — Ewelina's vision for what biocomputing means for society in 10–20 years.

 

  LINKS MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE

  Dr. Ewelina Kurtys on LinkedIn

  Ewelina's Personal Blog & Articles

  FinalSpark (official website)

  FinalSpark Neuroplatform (with live neuron view)

  FinalSpark Team

  Psync (Ewelina's mental wellness startup)

  FinalSpark Contact Form

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