HiveBio is Working to Become Seattle's First Community Biology Lab (Video)
HiveBio in Seattle is not the world's first community-based biology lab, but it may be the first one started by a high school student. Her name is Katriona Guthrie-Honea, and her co-founder is Bergen McMurray. They managed to get a lot of equipment and supplies donated to their new venture, along with a successful Microryza Campaign that raised $6425 even though their target was only $5100. They're renting space from a local hackerlab, and getting an insane amount of publicity for a venture that's just starting out. But why not? If Bergen's and Katriona's example can spur others to learn and create, whether in mechanical engineering, physics, electronics, computer science or biology, it's all good -- not only for the participants, but for anyone who might someday benefit from creations or discoveries made by people who got their first taste of hands-on science or engineering in a hackerspace or community biology lab.
Resident Evil reference ... what could possibly go wrong ...
Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
The first asshole to create some "weapon of mass destruction" in that lab will cause it shut down.
Or some asshole who points out the fact that a weapon of mass destruction could be made in that lab could get it to be shut down.
Irony intentional.
Think about it.
a) Someone tries to use it as a meth lab. Shut down.
b) Tenant in building complains. Shut down.
c) Reporter finds that a convicted violent felon is doing something there everyday. Shut down.
I'm very happy that they have $6K, but that probably won't even carry the annual liability insurance for a "public" biology lab.
So, they're gonna be designing molecules on a Raspberry Pi computer and then 3D-printing the molecules with PLA filament via an Arduino-powered 3D printer?
Did I miss any meme?
Get free satoshi (Bitcoin) and Dogecoins
All I saw in this video was white people. Where's the diversity? If McMurray and Guthrie-Honea had been named Robinson and Coleman, would they have attracted the same level of investment? In this year 2013, is "makerspace" just a code word for "safe place without African-Americans"? These are serious questions, deserving of serious answers. Unfortunately, I don't think the answers will be complimentary to mainstream USA culture.
Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
So, why hasn't the BATFE shut this down for violating ITAR regulations?
I call bullshit
I'm pretty sure most office refrigerators are already considered "community biology labs".
I love seeing the marketplace come to people at such a low level. The corporate stuff is doing its own thing but where I see the most currently untapped potential is in the cheap and easy collaboration and innovation from hobbyists. Like open source development, kick starter, hell even the 3d printers coming out, It is all part of a kind of industrial renaissance to cut out middle men of all sorts. Mass production and dedicated workers and resources still have their place, but the ideas that will come from a flood of individual inventors will surely supplement the corporate environment with ideas that are more aimed at directly appealing to people, rather than through the byzantine process of corporate and government bureaucracy.
I don't see an equipment list anywhere. I would imagine that you'd be pretty limited in a small lab. I'm not sure what kinds of chemicals they plan to have access to as well (I saw what looked like a vertical gel box in the video but could not listen to audio where I was at, so presumably they'll need at least salts and acids/bases for making buffers).
Then again, I'm a biochemist, not a biologist, so maybe there is a fair bit of stuff you can do in a "biology" lab. However, the last time I was in a modern university lab that was focused on what I'd consider biology they were doing a fair amount of molecular biology, working with animals and cell lines, etc. That requires quite a bit of expensive equipment, and ongoing care/expense (freezers, even LN2 freezers, cages full of mice, etc).
I couldn't much on their website - it seems like all the content is in the video which I can't listen to at the moment.