Radio Controlled Plants 9
Winged Cat writes: "BusinessWeek has a story
on plants that can transmit and react to radio signals, to act as
remote sensors and actuators (say, to report degraded soil conditions
and/or prepare for a cold snap). ObComments: if they could also do
some computation, you could grow your own Beowulf cluster; and I
wonder if you could enter this into Robot Wars?"
Re:But what to call it? (Score:2)
Isn't this a little overly optomistic? (Score:1)
Slightly more complicated to control a plants growth remotely (tiny electric shocks and mirrors to move the plant maybe? Constricting water flow, stuff like that)
But to alter a plants genetics? Ehh sorry, I just don't buy it. Besides, I don't really want to eat genetically altered corn, made by engineers. Why on earth would anyone eat plants that automatically alter their own genetics?
When it gets right down to it, the idea is silly and overblown. There are many other ways around the problem of monitoring plants, and resource production from plants. This is just an interesting waste of time.
But what to call it? (Score:1)
cyborg (sbôrg) (n.) A human being who has certain physiological processes aided or controlled by mechanical or electronic devices. [cyb(ernetic) + org(anism).]
cybernetics (sbr-ntks) (n., used with a sing. verb) The theoretical study of communication and control processes in biological, mechanical, and electronic systems, especially the comparison of these processes in biological and artificial systems.
organism (ôrg-nzm) (n. ) 1. An individual form of life, such as a plant, an animal, a bacterium, a protist, or a fungus; a body made up of organs, organelles, or other parts that work together to carry on the various processes of life. 2. A system regarded as analogous in its structure or functions to a living body: the social organism.
While the root words seem to indicate that a plant with a controller chip would fit the term cyporg, actual usage seems to be restricted to human or human like organisms. Some more definitions:
cyber- (pref.) Computer: cyberpunk. Computer network: cyberspace.
-phyte (suff.) A plant with a specified character or habitat: halophyte. A pathological growth: osteophyte.
Combining these terms results in the word cyberphyte , a plant characterized by being part of a computer network. How does this sound? Does anyone have other ideas for a good, descriptive term for this type of organism? Perhaps something that includes a hint at the ability to be genetically reprogrammed? I'm kinda stumped about that part and don't know if that is too specific.
Re:But what to call it? (Score:1)
You've almost got it! Try cyborganism .
Eris
MORE THC... (Score:1)
Re:Crackers (Score:1)
Re:Isn't this a little overly optomistic? (Score:2)
You know that corn you buy in the supermarket or as part of another foodstuff? If it isn't labeled "organic", it's probably a product of genetic engineering. If it is labeled "organic", it's probably a human-created hybrid with ancestors that were randomly mutated by deliberate by use of mutagenic compounds and artificial radiation. And if it happens to be in the tiny percentage of worldwide corn production that is neither of those, it's a human created hybrid whose ancestors were randomly mutated by radiation from the largest nuclear reactor in the solar system.
Crackers (Score:1)
Re:But what to call it? (Score:1)
Dancin Santa