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        Author Damien Broderick on future of work, fun & learning

        from the nanoenthusiasm-from-down-under dept.
        Senior Associate Dave Sag (davesag) writes "Damien Broderick, author of The Spike which discussed the predicted tangential upcurve in technology leading to a singularity in an upbeat and enthusiastic way which got him quite some press, has been interviewed on an Australian educational site called Learnscope. It's weird. He disses the International Space Station but seems convinced that nanotech will really be the duck's nuts (to coin a phrase). He speculates on the future of work, fun and learning. It's a shame there isn't a nanodot category called 'pop-sci good times'."

        Gates says computers will not save the world

        from the atoms-not-bits dept.
        Senior Associate Brian Hall [brian] writes "Will computer technology save the world? Not according to Mr. Gates. From this article at The Observer, Bill says he's been "very, very naive" about the promises of Technology in helping the billions of people in the world whose greatest question is NOT things like Linux vs. M$, but rather is there any food to eat or clean water to drink? As an idealist, this is good news(tm) since Bill's bucks could actually make a difference."

        Foresight conference stimulates "Future Lust"

        from the lusting-for-nanotech dept.
        An item by digitech posted on slashdot by Senior Associate Jeff "Hemos" Bates brings our attention to a piece at Reason titled "More More More: Nanotechnology and the Law of Accelerating Returns" by Ronald Bailey on the recent Foresight Conference on Molecular Nanotechnology. Excerpts: "[Kurzweil's keynote] predictions of superfast progress received a sympathetic hearing at this gathering of around 400 nanotechnologists. That's hardly surprising of course: That's exactly what they are working to achieve…the fact is that very few practical nanodevices have made it out of the labs yet. Still, given an inkling of what the future may hold, I suffer not from Future Shock, but Future Lust."

        Peter Schwartz in Red Herring on nanotechnology

        from the he-sponsored-our-first-nanoconference dept.
        Global Business Network chairman and Foresight Advisor Peter Schwartz, author of The Long Boom, writes about nanotechnology in his Scenarios column in Red Herring: "No idea has gone from wild, fringe science to the dead center of mainstream research faster than nanotechnology. Perhaps the impact of nanotechnology will be felt just as rapidly…There are early hints that the first commercial nanotechnologies are not far off. Venture capital is already beginning to flow toward nanotechnology companies…Nanotechnology's development is inevitable: it's only a matter of when and where. Will it be in the United States now, or somewhere else later?" CP: Or somewhere else now? The U.S. lead may not be strong.

        Nanomedicine story in Red Herring

        from the curing-Martian-cancer dept.
        Quite a long story on nanomedicine appears in the "business of technology" magazine Red Herring. The main focus is the collaboration between NASA, the National Cancer Institute, and Caltech: "Nanotechnology–the art and science of the vanishingly small device–used to be easy to dismiss as so much blue sky. It's not so easy anymore, now that three of the nation's biggest scientists have thrown their weight behind a project to create molecule-size medical technologies by 2020, in time for the first manned mission to Mars." CP: Hey, any excuse is fine with us, even Mars. [Errata: Pierluigi Zappacosta wishes to point out that it was Jim Bennett, not himself, who co-founded Foresight Institute, as claimed in their timeline.]

        Who can jump the biotech-to-nanotech gap?

        from the bio-is-a-subset-of-nano dept.
        Lots of folks ask, in which public companies can I invest today in order to ride the nanotech wave as it occurs? Some companies in the biotech sector will be able to make the jump to nanotech as that begins to make sense commercially. An excellent prospect is ArQule, a profitable public company which was named individualinvestor.com's Stock of the Day last Friday. An excerpt from that story on Yahoo: "The company also has announced a venture with privately held Nanosyn, a research consortium concentrating on the still-developing nanotechnology [emphasis added] sector." Disclaimer: the above is personal opinion and does not reflect the opinion of any organization. Moreover, it is the personal opinion of someone who is not rich. Invest at your own risk.

        Effect of private investment on nanotechnology

        from the money-is-nice-but-less-politics-is-better dept.
        In the 20 October Science (free registration req'd), Editor-in-Chief Donald Kennedy sketches the effect of private money on basic research. One topic discussed is "the declining relative state of scientific equipment and facilities in the research universities. I say relative because the equipment and the buildings aren't really that bad, except in comparison with what is available in the new companies, many of them startups, that now perform an increasing fraction of the kind of basic research that used to be an academic monopoly. The availability of venture capital and the liveliness of our entrepreneurial culture have radically altered the character of commercial science, attaching financial opportunity to the nascent front end of the innovation cycle. Molecular and cell biology, nanotechnology [emphasis added], and computer science are among the disciplines that have been transformed by this migration." CP: It's true that there's plenty of private money available for nanotechnology companies. Tenure-track professors are hearing the siren song. But I disagree on one point: what these refugees dislike most in academia is the politics, not obsolete equipment.

        New Topic Icons

        from the your-call-is-important-to-us dept.
        Are the new textual topic icons an improvement or an eyesore? Read More for the reasons behind them, and voice your opinion in the new Poll.

        Why genes in nature shouldn't (or should) be patented

        from the I-own-the-code-that-makes-your-liver dept.
        Confused about the rationale behind the patenting of genes found in nature? Find out by reading Technology Review's Sept/Oct 2000 story by Antonio Regalado The Great Gene Grab. An excerpt: "However, when it comes to human genes…legal precedent offers a way around that prohibition, namely that genes captured and identified in the lab arenít in their natural form…From the point of view of patent law, a gene is just another man-made chemical." Also of interest in that issue: The Case for Gene Patents by William A. Hazeltine, whose comments on atomic-scale engineering have been cited favorably here on nanodot, and Toward Sharing the Genome by Seth Shulman, author of the book Owning the Future.

        Neuromechanical protheses & lifespan increase via nanotech

        from the medical-researchers-getting-excited dept.
        From a press release on Yahoo News: William A. Haseltine, Ph.D., chairman and CEO of Human Genome Sciences, Inc., will outline the development of a major new branch of medicine in his keynote speech to The First Annual Conference on Regenerative Medicine on December 4… The fourth phase of regenerative medicine arises from an incipient revolution in materials science. “Living things are engineered to subatomic physical tolerances, and atomic-scale engineering, sometimes called nanotechnology, will soon provide that capability for many artificial materials,'' states Dr. Haseltine. “We should then be able to engineer new components for cells, organs, and tissues that will integrate seamlessly with our natural ones. Neuromechanical prostheses that respond smoothly and precisely to neural impulses are just one likely result. Extrapolations of observable developments imply that if all goes reasonably well, the human life span can be significantly increased.''

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