Nano-trains in New Scientist
The Evil Dwarf from Hell writes "New Scientist has a very interesting article on Nano-trains. The researcher built the tracks out of microtubles in cow neurons with the motors of kinesin running on fuel of ATP. " OK, next I need a nano-train that speeds up the flow of my neuropeptides across the synaptic cleft. Then I'm set-or starting on a whole new set of things.
Looks pretty cool. Where would they get the miniature traindrivers ?
Science never ceases to amaze me. The only thing I don't understand is how they would assemble whatever they are building.
Message on our company Intranet:
"You have a sticker in your private area"
beauty is only a light switch away
I have a question - why is it that
Nanotech doesn't have anything to do with MS, even remotely, and yet a good % of the posters can't keep their attention span on the theme for the few minutes it takes to write, before losing control and ranting on about how stupid MS software is and how evil they are (with numerous clever spellings using $ signs and hilarious remarks at how unstable it is).
After it's been repeated a few hundred times, it does get a little tiresome. Give it a rest, please. We don't need to be reminded of it every 1/5 post, esp. since I only use linux and don't see any context-relevant stuff.
Tattoo it on your chest. Go see a shrink. But don't keep yapping the same tiresome thing over and over.
Vogel has discovered the perfect combination: Teflon and cow brains. Her trains are made from fragments of microtubules, protein filaments one thousandth the diameter of a human hair that crisscross the inside of nerve cells-- including those in cow brains. Slice these filaments into minute segments, drop them onto thin Teflon tracks and the tiny trains race off.
Gee, hope she didn't get any mad cow disease inflicted bovines volunteering for the job.
Othwerwise we'll literally be driven off the nano-rails.
BLAMMO shaken not stirred
Fortunately there is a lot of work going on in this area. Have a look at the subsumption architectures they are working on at MIT (No URL I'm afraid). Its for macro scale robots but the principle of build behaviour from a hierachy of simpler behaviours will still apply.
BigTom (who still cannot remember his password)
1) Fight Mini Me on equal footing.
2) Swim around (without showering) in Bill Gates' morning cup of coffee.
3) Freak out your coworkers by being the bug in their program.
4) Get lost under the CAPS LOCK key of an experienced programmer, thereby hiding safely for years on end.
5) Still inside people's keyboards, rewire them permanently from the inside to be in DVORAK mode.
6) Build a gigantic mansion in the vast expanse of land that is Jennifer Love-Hewitt's cleavage.
7) Be a mosquito that torments Tinker Bell at Peter Pan productions.
8) Beat up bacteria and take their lunch money.
-
Strangely, that reminds me of Jurassic Park and the failsafe's they built into the dinosaurs...
A basic principle of Drexlerian nanotech is that bottom-up is better than top-down. This nanotrain is a huge achievement, but ultimately it's quite simple - just a few moving parts. And once you've built something simple but foolproof, you can build something a bit more complex on top.... and test it to foolproofness again... and then... it's essentially how life developed, except evolution is somewhat more random.
There's a parallel here with software, of course - open source stuff "grows" bottom-up from hundreds of coders solving real problems, whereas Windows trickled top-down into a thousand pools of problems. For me, this is a more fundamental difference between OSS and CSS than the few coders/many coders difference. If we're to build the incredibly complex machines nanotech will make possible, we have to go the bottom-up route - no question.
- Read fiction at www.espressostories.com
Try reading "The Diamond Age" by Neal Stephenson for a whole bunch of much scarier and wonderful ideas about nanos.
First, make it work, then make it right, then make it fast, then, make it bloated!
A bad round of computer problems got me thinking. Who will be the nano technicians when a batch of self replicating little robots go amok?
It would be great if we had nano robots to help us in our world, such as microsurgery or building houses. However, am I the only one who imagines self sustaining intelligent robots that are short a few lines of code or under the control of someone with less than pure intensions? A bad breed of nasty robots could run unchecked if only a priviliged few had nanotechnology. If technology like this were freely distributed, we would have the means to keep it under control. If it were a trade secret, watch out for nanoviruses!
"OK, next I need a nano-train that speeds up the flow of my neuropeptides across the synaptic cleft. Then I'm set-or starting on a whole new set of things ... " ...
Or your an epileptic . acceleration of brain functions generally has a price . People have actually tried things along these lines ( most were pretty silly ) . Nature has been working on it for a few billion years
All I really want is a simple Floating point processor and maybe a few registers to play with installed in my frontal lobe . I would be happy .
Wow. First 'O' gauge, then 'HO' gauge, and now, 'nano' gauge. This will make for wonderfully complex layouts, but somehow I think it will be difficult to detail and weather these suckers without an electron microscope.
Gotta prevent those nasty collisions.
"Check box five: Avoid spurious cow sperm on main #2."