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March 2008

March 31, 2008

Kill Your Babies (I know, I know, but that's what it's called)

I am not that familiar with Ira Glass and, post iPod car integration I don't really listen to the radio, but I may have to start. This is great, especially the part about "killing" (starts around 1:30). So true.


IMA

March 28, 2008

IMA's Latest. The 88

This is a cool editing project we just finished for a new highrise called The 88. The final HD version will play on four 60 inch plasma screen TVs in the lobby.


IMA

This Internet thing? I don't think so

This story has been making the rounds this week and I thought we would add to the fire. Being something of an optimist when it comes to technology I cannot really fathom what Clifford Stoll was thinking. I realize it is easy to dismiss his ignorance from the comfort of the present but still? Do we really need a salesman to buy something?

IMA1995_2

March 25, 2008

Continuing with the MacBook Air Stories

Maybe it is too thin? You certainly don't want to lose it this way.

Lost without a trace

Charlie Takes a Fall

Well, we have recently posted clips from Charlie Rose and posts about the Macbook Air. Last week, through cosmic synthesis, it all came together. Unfortunately for Mr. Rose, the cosmos pushed back. But you have to admire his loyalty.

Charlie is black and blue


IMA

IMA Interactive Says...V.4

The Full quote is even better.

"Make no little plans. They have no magic to stir men’s blood and probably themselves will not be realized. Make big plans; aim high in hope and work, remembering that a noble, logical diagram once recorded will never die, but long after we are gone will be a living thing, asserting itself with ever-growing insistency. Remember that our sons and grandsons are going to do things that would stagger us. Let your watchword be order and your beacon beauty. Think big."
IMA

March 18, 2008

IMA Interactive says V.3


IMA

March 10, 2008

IMA Interactive says V.2...


IMA

March 06, 2008

IMA Interactive says...

March 04, 2008

Craig Venter and Stewart Brand talk about things I don't really understand

I went to a Long Now talk last Monday. The speaker was Craig Venter, famous for mapping the human genome. I have been misquoting him to anyone who will listen for the last week. Really, really amazing stuff but quite a ways above my head. Instead of going into more detail I will leave it to Stewart Brand, the moderator of the event, to break it down.

"To really read DNA accurately and understand it thoroughly, you need to be able to write it from scratch and make it live, Venter explained.

His sequencing the first diploid human genome (with the genes from both parents) last year showed there is much more genetic variation between humans than first thought. His current goal is to fully sequence 10,000 humans and bring the price for each sequence down to $1,000. With that data, his says, "We'll begin to really learn what's nature and what's nurture."

"Microbes make up one half of the Earth's biomass." Venter's shotgun sequencing of open-ocean microbial samples revealed that every milliliter of ocean has one million bacteria and archaea and ten million viruses even in supposedly barren waters. Taking samples on a round-the-world sailing trip showed that every 200 miles the genes in the microbes are 85% different.

"Microbes dominate evolutionary diversity," Venter said. Some 50,000 major gene familes have been discovered. Humans and other complex animals have a small fraction of that in our own genes, but the "microbiome" of our onboard microbes carry the full richness. Only 1/10th of the cells in a human are human; the rest are microbes. There are 1,000 species in our mouths, another 1,000 in our guts, another 500 on our skins, and those with vaginas have yet another 500 species.

Analysis has shown that a tenth of the chemicals used in our body come to us via our gut microbes. "We are what we feed our bacteria and what they give us."

In an effort to determine what is the minimum gene set for life, Venter's team took a 500-gene bacteria and began knocking out genes. They got the viable set down to 400 and realized that the only way they are going to understand the complexity is by mimicking it. They would need to synthesize a working genome artificially, first on a computer and then with assembled base pairs and "boot it up" in a living cell, making a new, unique species. They devised techniques that repaired errors during synthesis, and they demonstrated that a genome from one kind of bacteria could be implanted in another and come to life there, changing one species into another. "It was true identity theft."

"This software builds its own hardware," Venter marveled.

He emphasized that synthetic biology does not re-do Genesis, but it does offer a kind of Cambrian explosion, building on 3.5 billion years of evolution to go in an infinity of possible directions. The range of possibilities is indicated by an existing organism that can take 1.75 million rads of radioactivity in 24 hours, which explodes its genome. It can reassemble the shattered genome and live on. It can go dormant for millions of years, and live on. That means life may already have migrated between planets.

Venter proposed that our current energy and climate situation requires truly disruptive technology. One project he's working on would use altered microbes to metabolize coal in the ground and generate methane, for a tenfold increase in carbon efficiency. Another project proposes a "4th generation biofuel," where engineered algae directly convert CO2 into hydrogen in bioreactors.

"Ten million genes are the design components of the future," Venter concluded. "With combinatorial genomics and casette-based construction, we can make millions of genomes per day."

During the Q & A I asked Venter why he spends so much of his time speaking in public, 150 talks a year. He said he sees that as part of his scientific work, to prepare the public for the big changes coming. He wants to avoid repeating the mistakes made with genetically modified crops (GMOs), where there was insufficient transparency and regulation, and irrational opposition by environmentalists, which crippled a crucial field.

The public should feel it is included in every stage of genetic science and emerging biotechnology."

Good stuff
IMA