Bio-Hacking
Bio-hacking involves a wide range of practices aimed at
improving physical health,
extending longevity,
easing the aging process,
rehabilitating or improving sensory experience,
enhancing physical appearance
These practices encompass:
nutritionally-dense diets (meals are 3D printed for total convenience)
magnetic implants (to stimulate muscles, or increase sensory perception, or enhance neurotransmitter activity in the brain)
bionics (eyes, ears, limbs)
artificial organs (3D printed with one's own cell tissue)
DNA reconstitution (to enhance growth or reverse disease)
gene editing (altering specific genes to combat disease or improve function)
genetic engineering (when the aggression genes were isolated, parents on the Continent began to opt them out, leading to new generations of kinder people)
brain prosthetics (computer chips can take the place of aged or damaged centers of the brain)
internal OS (everything is connected to the grid—our equivalent of the web—even our brains, achieved with an implant with a unique IP address and an operating system that is accessed through retinal display)
constant health-monitoring (through subcutaneous implants connected to your brain's operating system)