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Technology Review: TR10: Biological Machines

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Technology Review: TR10: Biological Machines
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TR10: Biological Machines

Michel Maharbiz's novel interfaces between machines and living systems could give rise to a new generation of cyborg devices.

A giant flower beetle flies about, veering up and down, left and right. But the insect isn't a pest, and it isn't steering its own path. An implanted receiver, microcontroller, microbattery, and six carefully placed electrodes--a payload smaller than a dime and weighing less than a stick of gum--allow an engineer to control the bug wirelessly. By remotely delivering jolts of electricity to its brain and wing muscles, the engineer can make the cyborg beetle take off, turn, or stop midflight.

The beetle's creator, Michel Maharbiz, hopes that his bugs will one day carry sensors or other devices to locations not easily accessible to humans or the terrestrial robots used in search-and-rescue missions. The devices are cheap: materials cost as little as five dollars, and the electronics are easy to build with mostly off-the-shelf components. "They can fly into tiny cracks and could be fitted with heat sensors designed to find injured survivors," says Maharbiz, an assistant professor at the University of California, Berkeley. "You cannot do that now with completely synthetic systems."

Maharbiz's specialty is designing interfaces between machines and living systems, from individual cells to entire organisms. His goal is to create novel "biological machines" that take advantage of living cells' capacity for extremely low-energy yet exquisitely precise movement, communication, and computation. Maharbi z envisions devices that can collect, manipulate, store, and act on information from their environments. Tissue for replacing damaged organs might be an example, or tables that can repair themselves or reconfigure their shapes on the basis of environmental cues. In 100 years, Maharbiz says, "I bet this kind of machine will be everywhere, derived from cells but completely engineered."

The remote-controlled beetles ...

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    • 5 months ago


      I believe these cyborg insect bio-machines are much more advanced now than they let the public know. These advance cyborgs have been unethically implanted as a nymph into unsuspecting american citizens human body for experimentation, control and other aberrated purposes. The cyborgs experiments are let to grow to adulthood in the unsuspecting citizen. These cyborgs are controlled by wireless signals and can deliver toxins to a human body. They most likely were used by the evil Bush administration as terrorism weapons against the prisoners in Guantanamo, Cuba, as well as implanted in law abiding Democrats and other citizens with some other medical problems as torture or/and experimentation. These have created a new disease currently being investigated by the CDC named - Morgellons Disease.
      DigitalNow www.fusionproductions.com/digitalnow
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