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'Biology Will Be the Next Big Computing Platform' (wired.com) 70

An anonymous reader writes: "Amazon, but for Crispr." It's a notion that may sound far-fetched -- but it's exactly what Synthego, a Silicon Valley biotech startup, wants to be. Synthego's first product let scientists order a custom Crispr kit and have it delivered within a week; in the next few weeks, the startup will add custom Crispr'd human cell lines to its on-demand offerings, which will help scientists working on potentially life-saving medicines. Crispr, as this WIRED guide explains, "is a new class of molecular tools that scientists can use to precisely target and cut any kind of genetic material." It's revolutionizing biology -- but neither of Synthego's founders is a biologist. Turns out, in the ever-expanding industry around genome engineering, that's hardly a disqualifier.

Across the country, companies are trying to snag a seat on the fast-moving Crispr train. There's Inscripta, which is gunning to be the Apple of gene-editing by building the biological equivalent of the personal computer. In theory, that hardware will make gene editing as easy as pushing a button. And then there's Twist Biosciences, which can print out a powerful Crispr guide (the tool that identifies the bits of genetic code a scientist is hoping to target) on a single semiconductor chip -- the Intel of genome engineering, if you will. As Megan Molteni writes, "all these analogies to the computing industry are more than just wordplay." Rather, they offer a language for understanding the complex world of Crispr. "Crispr is making biology more programmable than ever before," Molteni writes. "And the biotech execs staking their claims in Crispr's backend systems have read their Silicon Valley history. They're betting biology will be the next great computing platform, DNA will be the code that runs it, and Crispr will be the programming language."

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'Biology Will Be the Next Big Computing Platform'

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  • Crispr'd (Score:1, Redundant)

    by Hognoxious ( 631665 )

    Oh for the good old days, when an apostrophe meant "look out, 's' on the way!", and that's how we liked it.

  • My startup (Score:5, Funny)

    by 110010001000 ( 697113 ) on Friday May 04, 2018 @12:30PM (#56554894) Homepage Journal
    My startup is planning on being the next "Uber for Crispr". Our current valuation is $54.3B but we are looking at a $3T market. If you are interested in learning more, just message me.
    • by tomhath ( 637240 )
      I would, but I'm busy with my "Twitter for Crispr" company.
    • I'm old school. 3D printing FTW!

    • by theCat ( 36907 )

      "Crispr-on-demand" is going to become a very crowded play. China will dominate, as they will dominate in AI. Your best bet is to come up with a good product, and sell into a larger company. Take your $700K in tradable stock options (that's what I did) and get out.

      • China will dominate

        Indeed. My daughter is a biotech major in college. She received four internship offers for this summer. Most of her classmates received zero. She was explicitly told that the difference was her ability to speak fluent Mandarin. Biotech is moving to China. America is regulating yet another industry out of existence.

    • by kackle ( 910159 )
      Are you using blockchain technology? I would like to subscribe to your newsletter.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Yeah this'll work out great for the Chinese political prisoners who become the test bodies. It'll be GREAT!

  • More human THAN human. And by 2019, they won't have longevity expiration dates.
  • This sounds great. Also, add AI and block-chain technology.

  • I'm writing a novel based on some of the reported advances. I started it 20 years ago, as a grad student in biology with an interest in computers. I gave up biology and now I'm a software engineer, I return to writing my novel once in a while for relaxation. My novel covers some of the same ground as the news, over the years I have steadily watched my "fiction" slowly become "fact", so now I tell people I really have to get the thing published before it becomes less like speculation, and more like an indust

    • Well, you've got some competition. Just how many SF novels out there use gene enhancement as a major or minor plot device? Gazillions, I think. With results all over the map (although most would be considered dystopian).

      The problem is that reality will be much less sensible than even the most twisted B-movie straight-to-SY FY channel production.

      We're doomed.

    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      Outside of more modern tech, how is that different that Brave New World? Or perhaps your version is closer to R.U.R.? (Rossum's Universal Robots...only by robot Karel ÄOEapek meant synthetic human.)

    • Very common fear, very unlikely to come true. Humans are extremely good at killing things. We do it all the time, mostly without even realizing it. Whoops, there were passenger pigeons here just a short time ago.

      If we do manage to wipe ourselves out, most likely we be killing everything that is alive on a macro level. Microscopic stuff will survive us, but nothing bigger than a house cat.

      We tend to over-estimate the value of things we create, failing to understand the massive amount of human maintenanc

  • Aside from the fact Theranos should have made it abundantly clear that Silicon Valley is nothing but marketing and sales shills who have no place in tech, let alone science - this is overwhelmingly bad. Offering GM Human cell lines is fucked, even offering GM mammal cell lines is fucked. The GM isn't even the bad part of that. It is super easy for things to mutate in a mammal cell culture, then infect the researcher, then infect others. It's even possible (as in likely, not "possible" as in "it could ha
  • by macklin01 ( 760841 ) on Friday May 04, 2018 @01:09PM (#56555204) Homepage

    We taught a little of this in some of our engineering courses this Spring. Suppose gene A down-regulates gene B, and gene B down-regulates gene A. Then if (A,B) is your network state, (1,0) and (0,1) are stable states, and all intermediate states go back to one of these. This is a bistable toggle. It's a way to write a bit of data to a cell.

    Now, add two more genes: A promotes P which blocks A. B promotes Q which blocks B. This turns the system into a biological oscillator. Now you have a system click with tics (A up and B down) and tocs (A down and B up). Fun stuff.

  • by Hognoxious ( 631665 ) on Friday May 04, 2018 @01:11PM (#56555208) Homepage Journal

    Darwin: Actually, biology was the original computing platform.

    Wallace: I said it first!

    Mendel: No, it was me!

    [whispered] shove your peas up your butt

    Mendel: Who said that? I'll smash his fucking face in!

    Darwin & Wallace, in unison: Lamarck, like always.

    God: Play nice, or I'll send you all back as tapeworms.

  • What could possibly go wrong?

  • by pesho ( 843750 ) on Friday May 04, 2018 @01:20PM (#56555278)
    I have worked with Crispr/Cas9 for the past two years and have used the very nice product of one of the companies cited in the article (Synthego). This article makes no sense whatsoever. You can replace every instance of Crispr in the article with Blockchain and it will make exactly as much sense and be even better clickbait. Two of the companies offer cheap DNA/RNA synthesis service. The third one has cloned yet another Cas9 related enzyme, but still needs to show that the enzyme is of any use. Where does the "computing platform" come from is a mystery to me.
    • Thank you.

      This "news story" reads like one of the Dilbert comics where someone with no understanding of the meaning of the words mashes a bunch of buzzwords together.

      "They're betting biology will be the next great computing platform, DNA will be the code that runs it, and Crispr will be the programming language."

      None of these companies are looking at biology as a computing platform.

      While they aren't trying to use biology to perform computation, there are a number of ways computers are good parallels

    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      It doesn't take much to have a Turing Complete system. DNA in a cell *is* such a system. So the problem here isn't that they are lying. But I suspect the only new thing here is the kind of hype they are using.

      OTOH, so far I haven't been very impressed by the demonstrations I've heard of. Most of them sound like they work, but they don't look very controllable, and control is the difficult part of a Turing Complete system. (Actually, most of the systems aren't actually Turing Complete, but only recursiv

  • . As Megan Molteni writes, "all these analogies to the computing industry are more than just wordplay." Rather, they offer a language for understanding the complex world of Crispr

    So that means all those analogies to the computing industry are like "the CPU is the brain of the computer" and "the internet is a series of tubes."

    • I always thought that was reference to plumbing, but I suppose intestines are tubes too. And in one way it's more accurate.

      Sturgeon's law, isn't it?

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