This synthetic life stuff is all very clever, but what the bio-chemical geniuses of the planet should really be working on, night and day, without respite, is synthetic blood.
How, for pity's sake, has this breakthrough eluded us for so long ??
Blood ... and treasure
ND
6 comments:
Because of blood banks we have a substitute already.
But there are synthetic products available and more are under production. But their cost is far higher than than running blood banks.
It's not really 'synthetic life'. They took a fairly simple genome and built a copy from scratch in the lab. A great feat of synthesis but ...
when someone sits down at a computer, puts together a design for a simple organism, then builds it, and it 'works' - that'll be synthetic life.
Laban: " It's not really 'synthetic life'."
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nKZ-GjSaqgo&feature=player_embedded
OK, how about synthetic life forms?/
anon(1) - what I mean is something that (a) is a full blood-substitute and (b) can be mass-produced
blood banks can't possibly be satisfactory in the long run
What you need is TrueBlood, which was a Japanese invention and has enabled the emergence of an entire race of vampires from shadowed existence because they no longer need to prey on the rest of us. Of course their requirements for nocturnal existence and secure protection from sunlight has produced enormous economic opportunity in the provision of appropriate buildings, transport services, and 24/7 services of every kind. The fashion world in its most extensive meaning of the expression of taste and style in everything from clothes to the entire physical environment and its care and maintenance has been revitalised.
Perhaps if our best weren't working in banks or building property portfolios for themselves we'd have our artificial blood by now.
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