Monday, January 07, 2008
by Nik Kalyani
Monday, January 07, 2008 10:10:29 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
Can you imagine creating biological machines just as simply as writing code?

I am guessing your answer is no. Until today, I couldn't either. Then I watched this amazing video of Drew Endy at the Chaos Communication Congress. It is totally cool stuff. Here's a synopsis of the talk:

Genetic engineering is now a thirty year old technology. For reference, over a similar period of time, modern computing machines went from exclusive objects used to design weapons of mass destruction, to the now ubiquitous panoply of personal computing devices that support mass communication and construction. Inspired by this and many other past examples of the overwhelmingly constructive uses of technology by individuals, we have been working over the past five years to develop new tools that will help to make biology easy to engineer. We have also been working to foster a constructive culture of future biological technologists, who can reliably and responsibly conceive, develop, and deliver biological technologies that solve local problems.

This talk will introduce current best practice in biological engineering, including an overview of how to order synthetic DNA and how to use and contribute standard biological parts to an open source collection of genetic functions. The talk will also discuss issues of human practice, including biological safety, biological security, ownership, sharing, and innovation in biotechnology, community organization, and perception across many different publics. My hope is that the conferees of 24C3 will help me to understand how to best enable an overwhelmingly constructive hacker culture for programming DNA.

Watch the video, then head on over to the Registry of Standard Biological Parts. Prepare to be amazed by a Radio Shack-esque catalog of biological parts. Think tagging is only for Web 2.0 photos and videos? Think again...here's a collection of biological tags for biological engineers.


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