We imagine making products “not found in nature”—but even natural microbes make molecules that organic chemists would never dream of. Look at thisantitumor agent discovered from a filamentous soil bacterium, the kind of bacteria that give soil that new smell in the springtime (Science 297:1170). Those sets of three parallel lines are each triple bonds, within a nine-carbon ring. Who would even think to draw such a thing, let alone make it? To make it, the bacteria use modular enzymes, nanoscale assembly lines that condense one functional part after another. The original nanotechnology.
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A schizofrenic braindump, a stream of cyberpunk, post-cyberpunk, neopunk, futurism and sci-fi items, inspiration for my writing and game design. Usually managed by my trusty auto-posting AI residing in a possum-brain in my kitchen sink.
Go ahead and inject into my brainfeed via Twitter or Tumblr submit. Aslo, go ahead and challenge my AI with a question (warning, it bites).
Go ahead and inject into my brainfeed via Twitter or Tumblr submit. Aslo, go ahead and challenge my AI with a question (warning, it bites).
Could microbes grow the starship?
Lockheed Martin visualizing a space fence product to protect satellites and other orbital activities from the massive amount of debris and meteorites up there.
What interests me in this is the “maintenance perspective” of space fiction. It is not just about shuttling up and down people. Someone has to track, clean, protect and manage Earth’s orbit. There will be contractors, sub-contractors, lawyers and plenty of blue collar workers.
[MEGA-ENGINEERING] Japanese corporation Shimizu is not holding back when it comes to being visionary. But then again, for Japanese, everything is possible, just throw enough electronics and infrastructure money on it. Make sure you read the full article on Pink Tentacle.









