September 21, 2011
"Racetrack memory, a solid-state breakthrough technology, is a potential replacement for hard drives and successor to flash in handheld devices. A storage device with no moving parts, it uses the spin of electrons to access and move data to atomically precise locations on nanowires 1,000 times finer than a human hair. This technique combines the high performance and reliability of flash with the low cost and high capacity of the hard-disk drive. It could allow electronic manufacturers to develop devices that store much more information — as much as a factor of 100 times greater — while using less energy than today’s designs."

— Quote found in an IBM press release titled:  “IBM Survey: Nearly Half of IT Decision Makers Favor Solid-State Storage Technology

April 25, 2011
"Cornell researchers are using synthetic DNA to make nanoparticles, dubbed DNAsomes, that can deliver drugs and genetic therapy to the insides of cells. DNAsomes can carry multiple drugs as well as RNA molecules designed to block the expression of genes, an improvement over other drug-delivery systems."

— Quote found at NanoTechWire article  “DNAsomes’ can deliver multiple drugs or genetic therapy”

June 16, 2010
"The implications to our society are enormous, and the ethical and practical considerations are myriad. It has made me wonder about our built world and where a synthetic biology trajectory might lead. Will we be able to grow a live building in the future and what relevant forms might result? I think the answer lies in the tracking of several emerging trends. I also believe that any future edifice will, out of necessity, evolve from an interweaving of these trends. So what appear to me to be the salient trends? Parametric modeling, 3D printing, tissue engineering, nanotechnology, synthetic biology, self-organized manufacturing, artificial intelligence, artificial photosynthesis, swarm robotics, self-replicating machines, self-healing materials, programmable matter, thermodynamics and systems theory."

Quote by Tom McKeag, president of BioDreamMachine on the blog post   Will Synthetic Biology Lead to Truly Living Buildings? Blog post found at GreenBiz.comGreen Buildings


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