Re: virus: Old stuff for fun - solved

From: Erik Aronesty (erik@zoneedit.com)
Date: Wed Jan 21 2004 - 14:42:41 MST

  • Next message: Walter Watts: "Re: virus: Old stuff for fun - solved"

    I'd like to restate a prediction I made on kurzweilai.net

    Biological innovations will the primary drive behind all improvements in intelligence, nanoassembly and more.

    Visions of artificial intelligences as superior to men are much further off because men will begin enhance their own intellect firts - rather than rely on AI.

    Lilkewise, nanoassembly will be driven by genetically engineered bacteria and other microorganisms...

    Why reinvent the wheel?

    -----Original Message-----
    From: "rick" <aperick@centurytel.net>
    Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 12:00:59
    To:<virus@lucifer.com>
    Subject: virus: Old stuff for fun - solved

    Walter Watts included a link to a Smalley article, I have some comments.

    Fat fingers

    Sticky fingers

    These two proposed problems are avoided by using a modular approach.
    Modules consisting of several to thousands of atoms are produced in mass
    using old fashioned synthesis. Products are assembled from these
    modules. Any fingers which may be used by assemblers (and fingers may
    not turn out to be the only technique employable) are then not so fat
    nor as sticky due to considerable dimensional difference.

    Secondly, Smalley seems to envision bonds being formed by a sort of slow
    and careful, and above all intimate, placement of reactants. This shows
    his lack of understanding of chemical bonding in general, and activation
    energy in particular -- not to mention his lack of imagination. When
    doing molecular assembly a reaction site on the substrate would be
    accurately targeted by the assembler and any component (single or multi
    atom) must be delivered in a ballistic fashion to the reaction site. If
    my hand is too sticky to drop a ball I may still be successful in
    throwing it. Or, in the case of a largish ball, the far side of the ball
    may be pressed onto a substrate and adhere there with more stick than
    exists between hand and ball -- allowing removal of hand without
    dislocation of ball.

    For christ's sake, even Michael Crichton (in Prey) was able to solve
    these two 'unsolvable' problems. Smalley is as a 'creation scientist.'

    -------------------------------------------------------------------
    Rick Woolley: Closet nudist*, Certified Scientist Type, Confirmed
    Atheist, radical thinker, notorious f__k-up, late bloomer, and
    self-proclaimed singular authority on the abysmal depths of human
    stupidity that only we few lack.

    * Part time comedian and recovering idealist ... now show me yours :-)
    http://home.centurytel.net/rickw aperick@centurytel.net

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