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Rupert Goodwins

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Mixed Signals

Any sufficiently advanced information is indistinguishable from noise

Sunday 14 September 2008, 2:45 PM

Hacking nature - news from the silicon/carbon interface

Posted by Rupert Goodwins

Running through the RSS feeds this morning, I'm struck by the number of bio-engineering projects mentioned. This is just one day's (mainly) mainstream media coverage; if you actually go looking, there's much more bubbling away – there can't be a nanotechnology lab on the planet which isn't looking at metabolic pathways for clues in energy harvesting, the idea that we have to be smart about powering stuff from its immediate environment rather than plugging into chargers all the time. Similarly, watch out for some stunning stuff coming out of the mix of high-performance computing and cognitive neuroscience.

In today's harvest, though:

Cornell University has made a synthetic tree. It's not the full chestnut, mind, just a working model of transpiration – the process by which trees move water up through their roots and out through their leaves. The good bit about transpiration is that it is entirely passive: it's powered by evaporation, and the tree itself expends no energy. Zero-energy heating and cooling? Probably not – but it could get close.

Segway creator Dean Kamen has been working on a robotic prosthetic arm for the military, ostensibly to help war veterans. (Half an hour of video to watch here, mostly of Kamen talking, but it's all worth it. And check out the surreal introduction of "The American cricket crisis" in the third video segment). These days, body armour and streamlined medical procedures save a lot of soldiers who would previously have died – but they often survive without their limbs. The Luke Arm is the result, and it's a truly impressive piece of engineering with some very moving stories attached to it. Yet I do wonder if some of the military's enthusiasm for this may be linked to the way the device can be worn by fully fit people. Just saying.

That ubiquitous bacterium, E coli, has been hacked about and can now convert glucose to isobutanol to within 15 percent of theoretical maximum yield. Biofuels are controversial and with good reason: the industrial farming of crops to turn into fuel ethanol falls down on environmental, economic, practical and theoretical grounds, at least as far as the process is currently implemented. You don't want to have to haul lots of biomass around to processing plants, and you don't want to produce ethanol when there are far better hydrocarbons for fuels. A decent biological conversion process goes a long way to solving this part of the equation.

There's probably more – I'm only half-way down the 800 or so RSS items awaiting my attention – but on the old journalistic adage that "once is news, twice is a trend", I reckon three is enough to be getting on with.


Comments on this post

roger andre

There is lots to be positive about, and I think we'll crack it. I agree about the bio fuel issue. Too cumbersome and with more hungry people into to the bargain, by no means could this be considered evolutionary behaviour.

The military are known to have the desire to create the thinking, but unfeeling soldier.There is the soul catcher Implant chip. Dr. Chris Winter from BTs artificial life team was talking about this in 2006, and off the top of my head the plan for this chip was to be able to record a persons lifetime, emotions included.... Not very nice!!

Updated by roger andre on Sep 15, 2008 10:26 AM

Rupert Goodwins
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