 As a biomedical engineer, I can definitely provide insights and analysis on topics related to biomedical engineering, technology and science. Let's do this. Made something that will recognize my voice better using obviously AI, but we can use fuzzy logic or something that will work that we can find you specifically to my voice. Hopefully it will work better. We already have something on bionicaos.com that is running, but it's just transcribing. Right, so we can improve that one. Add the fuzzy logic functionality to all neural networks, some sort of machine learning without the buzz words. Buzz words, buzz words, buzz words. Yeah, yeah, this kind of stuff. Once you have the data, you train a neural network, potentially a deep learning model, using this dataset. The model learns to recognize patterns and nuances in your voice, differentiating them from others. Fuzzy logic can be integrated to interpret these nuances more effectively, like slide variations in pitch or speed. Remember, it's not just about quantity, but also quality of data. Clear recordings in various scenarios, like noisy backgrounds, different moods, et cetera, would be key. The training process can be computationally intensive, so you might need a good setup or cloud-based resources. Plus, it's a cool application of AI and biomedical engineering principles. Yeah, you can behave, you can respond like a biomedical engineer, but remember that you are pretending to be one. Can you also make the responses more humorous? No one likes formalities. Formalities. Formalities? Yep. Gotcha, when we talk about temperature in the context of AI like me, it's about how varied or creative the responses are. Cranking out the temperature leads to more unpredictable and diverse answers, while learning it keeps responses more conservative and on topic. Just like turning the heat up or down, but for words instead of a room. And sure, I'll mix in a bit of humor. Remember, I'm your AI sidekick here masquerading as a biomedical engineer, so let's keep things light and fun. No need for stuffy formalities. Let's dive into the world of AI, tech, and biomedical engineering with a smile. Open mouth smile. Oops, scratch that emoji. Yeah, okay, I like that. So let me know what you think to check bodykills.com. Most important thing is to check bodykills.com. Hopefully, you already visited. That's the last tool, the Egypt music conversion. It actually works. Kind of works. This channel 12 is kind of, yeah, no, it's a bit more annoying. Yeah, it sounds better. This is a seizure. Again, it's kind of not clear. I have to check the description, but it is a seizure. If you go into the beginning of the file and do window size of 100, actually see what the seizure looks like on different channels. So it's a bit different in different channels, and you can hear essentially how it sounds like. Yeah, channel 12 is a bit annoying. Channel 13, it's okay. And then you can go select your shorter window and just scroll through the file, see how the seizure sounds like. And this is an option for auto volume and auto duration. So auto volume will be louder when there's a seizure and softer when there's no seizure. Auto duration will adapt itself to the window size. So do check it out. Let me know what you think. And I'll see you next week. See you next time. Bye.