] SAN FRANCISCO -- Lots of people wish they could jack ] their brain directly to their computer and toss out those ] annoying keyboards and joysticks -- especially people who ] can't use keyboards or joysticks. ] ] Five quadriplegic patients might be months away from ] testing a brain-computer interface created by ] Cyberkinetics, a privately held company in Foxboro, ] Massachusetts. The company's system, called BrainGate, ] could help patients with no mobility to control a ] computer, a robot or eventually their own rewired ] muscles, using only their thoughts. If the trials go ] well, a product could be on the market by 2007 Wired News: Transforming Thoughts Into Deeds |