Slashdot Mirror


User: benjamin.haley

benjamin.haley's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
10
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 10

  1. Unaccounted Bits on How Many Bits Does It Take To Kill You? · · Score: 0

    This article is misleading in supposing that the nucleic acid sequence represents the only information in encoded in a virus. A naked nucleic acid strand wouldn't make it very far in the wild. Here are some extra sources of information applicable to influenza:

    1) RNA modifications

    2) protein modifications

    3) 8 different strands (the cut points are information)

    4 - n) The tiny matter of the structure and organization of the virus, its proteins counts and arrangements, and the way that its RNA strands are packaged (see the wikipedia article for more on this).

    So, the information contained in a single virus is far higher than its nucleic acid sequence. I'm not dead yet.

  2. legacy code on Device Reads Messages From Surface of the Brain · · Score: 0

    biology is ripe with code/hardware that has been running for billions of years, (eg ribosomes). I imagine that maintaining backwards compatibility will be something of an issue.

  3. name, rank, and serial number on What Do You Do With a Personal Domain? · · Score: 0

    It should represent you in a spartan way. Perhaps a picture, your name, and a link to favorite profile (linked in I suppose).

  4. Re:And yet on How American Homeless Stay Wired · · Score: 0

    I lived homeless traveling up the coast on a bicycle for four months last summer. I slept on strangers couches, outside the SF library, and under towering redwood trees. I had a laptop, phone, and frequent wi-fi hot spots to keep me in touch with the world. I blogged, I studied, I attended university lectures, and I loved it. When returning home, I had trouble returning to my bed. Modern amenities can feel like a mollifying prison if you've experienced life lived out of a back-pack and under the sun. I don't think you are wrong to worry about a homeless isolationists mental state. Perhaps, though, we should also worry about the mental state of those who never follow the yen to strike out into the lonely unknown.

  5. I see the light on Churches Use Twitter To Reach a Wider Audience · · Score: 0, Troll

    Parishioner: "I just had my lord and savior for breakfast!"

  6. Re:Value based on what, exactly? on Apple Rumored To Want To Buy Twitter · · Score: 2, Funny

    Twitter is the worlds best data source for modeling breakfast preferences. Do you realize how many advertising dollars will soon be pouring in from Capt'n Crunch and Count Chocula?

  7. Re:That's no way to run a Civilzation on Obama Says 3% of GDP Should Fund Science Research And Development · · Score: 1

    Honestly, I don't see why we bothered moving beyond Crusaders. With our population sated by mass opiate that is Michealangelo's Chapel world conquest was inevitiable. I guess that's one of the pitfalls of our mortal and hence shortsighted leadership. Hopefully Obama can fix all that. Go stem cells! Go!

  8. deja vu on Mad Scientist Brings Back Dead With "Deanimation" · · Score: 1

    has anyone seen pet cemetery...

  9. Products Comming on MyLifeBits to Store Every Moment of Your Life · · Score: 1

    I went to a lecture by memory expert Tom Coughlin, who predicted that lifelogging would dramatically increase consumer memory demands in the coming years. He pointed to a product Vievu. You can read a more thorough discussion of the lecture here

  10. Re:Related Resource on New Science Of Metagenomics to Transform Modern Microbiology? · · Score: 1
    I'm glad you got the resource.

    To think that genomes are just the tip of the iceberg. There is a whole planet of nucleic acids, RNA, virus, and membrane-free that are exchanging information and evolving far faster than genomes. I have to surmise there is a whole internet of genetics floating around and we are in the first steps of interfacing with it.

    An open question: What is the mass and energy expended on the various forms (genomic, RNA, virus, membrane-free, etc.) of nucleic acids in a biology? How well can we characterize the information flow and evolutionary rates of and between these forms?