IBM To Help Sequence the Chocolate Genome 95
Dekortage writes "The New York Times reports this morning that IBM will work with Mars — the candy company who makes M&Ms and Snickers, among other things — on a five year project to sequence the cocoa genome. According to Howard-Yana Shapiro, global director of plant science at Mars, the goal is to 'discover the genetic building blocks of traits like disease and pest resistance, drought tolerance and perhaps flavor.' Additionally, the project's results will be available for free from the Public Intellectual Property Resource for Agriculture."
Damn! (Score:1, Insightful)
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Re:Damn! (Score:5, Funny)
First, people stopped reading the articles. Next, they stopped reading the summaries.
I think we are now at the point where people stop reading the comments. Next after that, people will stop reading what they typed, and from that what they are typing. In only a few short steps Slashdot will become the biggest random number generator in existance.
Re:Damn! (Score:5, Funny)
I'm sorry, but... did you SEE your handle?
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Touche!
But it's not totally random - I (randomly) grabbed a joystick from my desk and read the product number off the bottom. My new handle was born. I was not feeling very creative at the time...
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4. Profit!
Re:Damn! (Score:5, Funny)
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That's odd, I don't recall seeing any press releases by K'breel, the speaker for the Council of Elders.
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No, but if they make any genetic modifications that result in flavor^h^h^h^h^h^h money enhancement, you betcha they'll patent THAT.
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I'm willing to help, too (Score:1, Funny)
However I will need MANY samples... from all over the world. For thoroughness of course.
Chocolate Gnome plan (Score:3, Funny)
2. Publish in the public domain
3. ???
4. Profit!
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3. Have agricultural scientists develop healthier, tastier, easier to grow, cheaper cocoa plants, saving you money on you biggest input expense.
Re:Chocolate Gnome plan (Score:5, Funny)
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But seriously it's actually thought, because of recent research, that chocolate is so pleasurable because it contains trace amounts of cannabinoids.
I can see it now "In an ongoing series of police raids in an effort to stop the illegal use and sale of Cocoa, officials seized 100 pounds of Wonka chocolate bars that were in the possession of a previously cited Cocoa abusing teenager. As a dealer, he faces a possible life sentence if convicted."
jdb2
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I can't remember the exact study, but googling the journals sure turns up a lot of stuff : http://scholar.google.com/scholar?q=cocoa+OR+cacao+OR+chocolate+cannabinoid+OR+cannabinoids+OR+cannabis&hl=en&lr=&btnG=Search [google.com]
jdb2
Off-topic, but hopefully helpful (Score:2)
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Doesn't dependence for chocolates start after 100 tablets a day? If you eat 10kg of chocolates a day, you have bigger problems than dependences to cannabinoids.
Remember, the dose makes the poison.
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jdb2
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I don't know. I've read good things about Mars [slashdot.org] lately. ;)
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That's true for a lot of Mars candy, to be sure, but they also own Dove, which actually turns out some reasonably good chocolate from time to time.
Re:Chocolate Gnome plan (Score:4, Funny)
Even better...
3. Have agricultural scientists develop edible brussel sprouts.
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Nice troll AC.
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May I be the first to say--- (Score:4, Insightful)
sorry, I couldn't help myself. thats it i'm going home for the day.
Call me a pessimist (Score:3, Funny)
I don't think IBM and Mars could work together and concentrate on anything less than "flavor".
Don't get me wrong, I like the idea. I just don't think there is as much altruism in this project as is claimed.
I know this is a stretch, but I would love to see this research lead to the first chocolate covered peanut tree. Or bush, I'm flexible.
Call me a realist (Score:2)
As to the organically grown chocolate covered peanut, since they grow underground, how would one know that the dirt had been adequately washed off?
Cacao not cocoa (Score:5, Informative)
You cannot decode the "chocolate genome" nor the "cocoa genome" any more than you can decode the flour genome. Chocolate, cocoa and flour are food stuffs, not plants. What IBM wants to do is decode the cacao genome.
More farming options (Score:2, Funny)
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Mars owns Mars? I for one welcome our chocolate-producing overlords!
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Your jeans should contain a noodle though.
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Yes, they do - they're vegetables: they grow in trees, and are harvested in places like Switzerland [museumofhoaxes.com]
Re:Cacao not cocoa (Score:4, Funny)
In unrelated news, scientists at IBM today isolated a new gene called the "anal retentive gene." It is highly related to the "grammar nazi" gene, and belongs to the "someone has way too much time on their hands" family of genes.
Anyway, alomex, you should probably e-mail Mars and IBM right now. They're going to be wasting a lot of time and chocolate otherwise.
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Don't worry that the rest of the world uses common names for things.
Let's see....
Google query: cacao in english language pages
Results: 4,830,000
Google query: "cocoa tree"
Results: 50,700
Heck cacao tree alone, which is redundant as cacao *is* the tree and nothing else beats that:
Google query: "cacao tree"
Results: 65,700
So no, cocoa is not the day to day term for cacao. In contrast human *is* the day to day term for homo sapiens, so I have no problem with IBM decoding the "human genome".
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It's one of the commonly used names. But feel free to trust google as the only authority on the English language.
I actually looked it up in Webster's and the OED as well, but did not report it as common usage. However even the editors of the OED admit that Google is ahead of them in terms of *tracking* English usage.
Amazingly people manage to cope with using multiple names for the one thing.
Hint: Cocoa is a brown powder, cacao is a plant.
Re:Cacao not cocoa (Score:4, Insightful)
Since you're going to be pedantic, the Wikipedia entry cleary states that the Cacao is also known as the Cocoa Plant [wikipedia.org].
There, I see your dubious Internet refrence and raise you another dubious Internet reference. People know *exactly* what is meant by cocoa plant.
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Actually the headline says "Sequence the Chocolate Genome" -- you cocoa/cacao purists must really have your shorts in a knot over that one.
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Coffee plant next please (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Coffee plant next please (Score:5, Informative)
Chocolate contains caffeine you idiot.
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You're welcome dumbass. It's like my grandpappy told me, if you're gonna be a jerk you better make sure the people round you get less stupid from it. Close as you can hope to making anyone smart.
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Well, my gramps was a Democrat, but that's basically an amplification of 'jerk'.
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I really do.
www.chocolatetreebooks.com/treepics.html [chocolatetreebooks.com]
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You'll notice the caffeine shirts [thinkgeek.com] are different.
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Then in that case, I'd just want well.. MORE!
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Coffee doesn't have beans, it has pits.
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Martian overlords welcome here (Score:1)
With two Mars articles, someone had to say it.
Ahhhhh!!! (Score:1)
Someone please mod this down before the Martian Overlords take note and begin blocking /.
You don't think the Chinese are the only ones that can do that, do you?What will they discover? (Score:3, Insightful)
I have a feeling they're going to discover something that they really wouldn't want to know. Like Chocolate is 99% the same genetically as poop.
Next week: Genome tests for chocolate have been canceled. One representative was heard to say 'Well, I don't think anybody's interested in this. Let's talk about something else.. Uhh... Free candy bars for everybody!'
Re:What will they discover? (Score:5, Funny)
Or even worse, they'll discover that if they remove the gene responsible for creating caffeine from cacao, they'll end up with carob. Personally, I'm hoping for the poop scenario.
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Quick! Somebody get Tay Zonday! (Score:2)
There's got to be a good song in this.
What if they discover that (Score:1)
Cocoa and carob are the same thing? Gasp.
Maybe the flavor (Score:3, Interesting)
See, that's we went from delicious but tiny wild strawberries and tomatoes to big red water bags traded under the same name: taste always comes last in the industry's priorities. Perhaps someone could clue in the cocoa producers that chocoholics can be just as discerning about taste as wine aficionados ...okay, most of us are barely more discerning than your average back alley wino...
wo! (Score:3, Interesting)
M&M Mars?? GIVING away research?? "The CIA of the candy industry"?? The company that won't even give plant tours to schoolchildren for fear of exposing trade secrets?? The candy company with NDAs?? The company that won't even reply to schoolchildren's letters with *promotional* *literature*??
Ok. What's *really* going on?
oops KIR - KOS lol cya