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    Home » Future Reference, Entry #2: Cyberpunk IRL is closer than you think
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    Future Reference, Entry #2: Cyberpunk IRL is closer than you think

    Lia EspinaBy Lia EspinaApril 30, 20253 Mins Read
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    Author’s Note: Welcome to entry #2 of Future Reference, where I keep tabs on tech that’s quietly turning us all into sci-fi characters. Today’s upgrade: hands that are literally… off-hand.

    Future Reference, Entry #1: Will you want to live in a Beta Test? Life inside Toyota’s Woven City

    Imagine removing your hand like a smartwatch. Snapping it off, setting it on the table, and still being able to control it from across the room. Sounds like something out of Cyberpunk 2077, right?

    Except it’s real, and it’s happening right now.

    Meet Tilly Lockey. Model, speaker, and poster girl for the bionic future. 

    View this post on Instagram

    A post shared by TILLY (@tilly.lockey)

    If you’ve followed her story, she has been at the center of the bionic conversation for years. She’s been fitted with Hero Arms from Open Bionics since she was a kid, turning what was once considered a limitation into something stylish, functional, and unapologetically futuristic.

    But now her bionic hands can detach. And she can still control them.

    With this latest upgrade, Tilly can leave her hand on a surface, like a table or a shelf, and still use it from a distance.

    View this post on Instagram

    A post shared by This Morning (@thismorning)

    The concept sounds unsettling at first, but then you realize: we’ve been doing this for years. Remote-controlled drones. Smartphones that unlock our doors. Virtual assistants that turn on our lights.

    This just happens to involve a body part.

    Cyborgs, But Make It Human

    Technically, a cyborg is anyone who has enhanced themselves using technology.

    By that definition, people with pacemakers, cochlear implants, or even smart glasses are already part of the club. But Tilly’s setup feels like we’ve crossed a threshold where machines stop being just tools and start acting as extensions of us.

    The concept of detachable, wireless limbs isn’t just about medical necessity anymore.

    It’s a hint at a future where optional upgrades might become the norm. Think modular bodies: arms with different attachments for different tasks, legs that swap for hiking, dancing, or sprinting.

    Sure, it’s experimental now but we said the same thing about touchscreens, VR goggles, and AI co-pilots.

    Would You Trust It?

    If cost wasn’t an issue, if bionic limbs were as accessible as smartphones, would you want one?

    Would you trade your biological arm for a better one if it meant more strength, more dexterity, or even more style?

    And more importantly: would you trust it?

    Would you feel safe if your hand could be hacked? Or if your body came with firmware updates?

    We’ve already put so much of ourselves into our phones. Our thoughts, our relationships, our memories. Maybe the jump to bionic limbs isn’t that far. Maybe the real shift isn’t in the tech, but in how much of ourselves we’re willing to outsource.

    Would you replace your hand if it could do more? Would you accept a leg that never got tired? Would you let go of your human limits, even if just for convenience?

    And even if you did… would it still feel like you?

    Human, Upgraded

    Tilly reminds us that this future isn’t as cold, clinical, or scary as we think it is. It’s actually very human, too.

    She’s not a science project or a superhero fantasy. She’s just a teenager who wants to do her nails and eat pizza with friends. 

    She’s just trying to live better. With options.

    And maybe that’s the real headline here: the future isn’t about replacing what we are. It’s about rethinking what’s possible.

    Future Reference Open Bionics
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    Lia Espina
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    Lia is a tech and lifestyle writer with over a decade of experience in making gadgets, games, and digital trends easy to understand. Most days, you’ll find her writing with a milk tea in hand and at least one cat supervising.

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