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"History is just people doing things"

 

THE ABQ CORRESPONDENT

                 ISSN 1087-2302   Online Edition Number 352......April 2025

Published since 1985 for clients and contacts of ABQ Communications Corporation, the fuzzy focus of The ABQ Correspondent is "the impact of new technology on society." If you'd like to receive email notification when each monthly issue is posted, please let us know.   correspo at swcp dot com 

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DISQUIETING

A couple of recent reports involving biology fascinate and provoke unease. One is the story of  the successful project to create “woolly mice” along the way to recreating the rather larger woolly mammoth. This was accomplished by selecting genes from Indian elephants (apparently the closest surviving relative of the woolly mammoth) that seemed likely to contribute both to wooliness and insulating fat, then gene-splicing them into a likely strain of mice. (Recall that while the term gene-splicing sounds like a matter of snipping a tidy strand of DNA, and surgically inserting a new section…it’s not a neat process. Like most everything biological, it’s messy and problematic, with only probabilistic results.) The other is a report that a company called Cortical Labs in Melbourne, Australia is offering for sale devices that combine living neural nets (“…pluripotent stem cells from consenting donors…” the stuff brains are made of) with electronic digital hardware that allows input and output of commands and data that are processed by the neural nets. It's “a computer.” A couple of years ago, the Correspo reported on this company’s work in developing a living/electronic system of this sort that could play Pong and in no time flat, we’ve come to commercial application of the technology, which they are calling Synthetic Biological Intelligence (SBI). What would you do with one of these computers if you had it? They speak of disease modeling and drug testing “…perhaps being leveraged for real-time autonomous tasks in robotics….” I don’t understand more than just the gist the basic technology (which is treated at length in a series of technical papers on the company’s website), or of the applications, but it’s easy to believe that this is big stuff looming in our near future. And here’s a kicker: if you aren’t running a lab equipped and staffed to handle the messy biology, but are, for example, computer people running software to explore complicated ideas, you don’t have to install your own SBI system from Cortical. They offer internet access to one or an array of the units they operate in their own labs. You can experiment with and apply SBI at whatever scale you choose. Some of us recall when using a Teletype machine to log into a remote computer by telephone was a sort of scary new idea. Back in the ‘60s our California lab installed a Teletype with suitable phone service in the apartment of a couple who were working for us while going to the University of Texas. That caused a lengthy struggle with the City of Austin, whose zoning people felt that it was improper to operate “business machinery “in a home. One supposes the zoning people in Melbourne are resigned to Cortical’s operations.

Oh, the woolly mice, while they may have

other unsettling characteristics, are universally

recognized as being wonderfully cute. While

the lab that developed them declares it has

no intention of breeding and selling them as

companions, one wonders if public demand 

will bring about their appearance in pet shops.

Maybe they can be modified further to hunt

and kill (or at least distract from reproducing)

the invasive Burmese pythons that are devastating

more desirable life in our southern swamps.

Yeah, disquieting.

 

APROPOS OF NOTHING IN PARTICULAR…

except the bone-wearying effort to commercialize new technology…we recall an incident in the late 1970s when we were trying to sell a computer software technology called SAVVY. Built initially using FORTH, it was extensible, combined a plain English (or plain anything else if you wanted it) programming language with neural net pattern recognition capability that compensated for typos big and small, and it interacted gracefully with other software. Even I could program a little bit in SAVVY, and Dar Scott created a SAVVY bookkeeping application that we used for decades. Only a few people were comfortable just using it, because it seemed improbable and a bit creepy. (Many insisted on knowing how we parsed English. We didn’t, and when we said so, they assumed we didn’t know what “parse” meant.) Anyhow, no big company picked it up, though we had close calls. Some small customers did use it, and loved it. One of those companies liked it so much they stole it, repackaged it with a logo that looked a lot like SAVVY, and sold it to customers beyond our reach in those pre-internet days. We didn’t know about this until I was called from my office to our conference room one day to meet a couple of visitors who were on a mission. They were with a Brazilian computer company, and they explained that they had appropriated our product, were selling it, and felt sort of bad about it. They didn’t reverse-engineer the product, just copied it. They proudly showed me their very handsome repackaging. I called a couple more people in to talk about this. The visitors wanted to know what arrangement they could make that would allow them to continue their activities with a clean conscience. Our sales manager, stunned like the rest of us, said we might license it to them, but would certainly need a substantial payment up front. “How much?” they asked. Caught off-guard and not thinking very clearly, Bill said, “At least five thousand dollars.” One of the visitors opened a brief case that must have contained a hundred thousand in U.S. currency. He carefully counted out $5K, handed it to Bill, and closed the briefcase. The two visitors picked up their stuff, shook hands with us, and departed, never to be heard from again. I wish $50K had popped into Bill’s head. Our company ran out of money and was put into the hands of people who didn’t understand the implications of the technology. Disheartened, the Old Guard technical team left, as did I. A couple of years later, the company was inhaled into one of the now-still flourishing big-tech companies.  Apart from that particular bone-wearying effort, we’ve had (and have) other before-their-time things to enjoy working on.

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NELS MUSES 

Item:

As the Correspo has commented more than once, people seem absolutely determined to make huge lighter-than-air craft practical. See this one developed with vast amounts of Google profits at Moffett field in the San Francisco Bay area (incidentally, our fourth kid was almost born in that hangar…owing to an important dinner meeting…long story). And here’s another…love the name FLYING WHALES…in Finland. One of the problems with these things, pointed out by a pilot long ago, is that the big dirigibles are so large that “weather conditions” can be very different at the front from what they are at the back (for all I know, also top and bottom), making control, even survival, very touchy. How can that be tested except by flying them?

 

Item:

Exoskeletons that increase people’s strength and leverage seem to be coming along very handsomely. Now, apparently, “AI enhanced exoskeletons”  can be rented by tourists embarking on multi-hour climbs up stairs to high levels of mountains in China. The article doesn’t really explain the AI aspect of the system, but the idea of reducing energy expenditure by 30+% while hiking up stairs is increasingly attractive.

 

Item:

Word came recently that Joann’s is planning to close all 800 of its fabric stores nationwide. While that may not distress everybody, and I admit that I really avoided going to Joann’s and its like with Mado over the decades, preferring to find a nearby coffee shop or better, a bookstore, than to wander uninterestedly among the bolts and the notions. On the other hand, ours is a family of costume designers. Chantal, Ondine, and their associates are thrilled to the bone by any opportunity get to L.A. and other centers to stroll the districts of fabric stores. This catastrophe of Joann’s will leave Albuquerque, and presumably many other cities, even of some size, with no stores dedicated to the genuinely important business of providing wonderful materials to the community… only a few places like Walmart whose enthusiasm for selling fabrics does not rise to the level of fervor. We’ve not yet seen informed commentary on the apparent decline in retail fabric sales…have people just quit sewing?

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ITEM FROM THE PAST

 

This item from 2006 is brought to mind by a

spate of recent reports of labs monkeying with

new applications for bioluminescence.

BIOMETRICS IN SPADES

The Microtox system, with which we were long involved, uses luminescent bacteria as test organisms. The bugs naturally release about ten percent of their energy in the form of light that is plenty bright for easy measurement (I once had four petri dishes with these bugs growing on agar with me in a hotel room, which they must really have liked, because they were lighting the whole room startlingly (I could almost read by it)  when I woke up at two in the morning). If they are exposed to anything toxic, the bugs get sick, and their light output dims proportionally. Using a clever approach to getting linear data from sloppy biology, the system works great. An intriguing new system along somewhat similar lines is far more complex, but potentially effective for special applications. In this case, genes from fireflies are transferred to the eggs of zebrafish, so that the cells of the fish hatching from them will produce luciferase, as fireflies do, when properly stimulated. Additional genes may be injected into the fish so that the stimulation of luciferase is caused only by specific chemicals, such as mercury. If a mercury-sensitive fish has been exposed to mercury in polluted waters, and is then exposed to luciferin in a test tank, it will glow like a firefly...

indicating its exposure to that specific pollutant. The developers of the test think they can tailor the fish to respond to a spectrum of different toxics of interest. They point out, somewhat defensively one feels, that the fish are not necessarily expended in the testing, but can live to glow again another day. Oh, good.

Like most everything I’ve been involved with, Microtox

was 25 years ahead of its time, and the company was

sold off before we could get it off the ground. About a

year ago the most recent owner of the now-in-use-

worldwide technology said proudly that “more than

500 papers have been published about it.” *sigh* I

wrote the first one. People have been trying to use

bioluminescence commercially in a lot of ways. One

recent article explains a project to create wood that

glows. They’re infusing wood (it takes many weeks)

with bioluminescent fungi that apparently alter the

structure of the wood without reducing its strength

as well as finding a new home to rest in and glow green

for as many as ten days. Another group is editing the

genes of critters like rabbits so you can have pets that shine

at you. Gee, we just took the bugs as they came.

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This book was written, richly illustrated, and published by excellent grandkid Malia. At 7 (gosh, eleven years ago) she was diagnosed with Type 1 Diabetes… suddenly, of course; “Get her to the hospital NOW!” and things have been nip and tuck since then with many scary crises. She’s taken control of her life…played and sang at Whiskey A Go Go on the Sunset Strip at 15, put out an album at 16, published this book at 17, and is off to college hundreds of miles from home. She has been videoed reading the book at a kids’ hospital, and every incoming T1D patient there from now on will see that video. Both pennies of her book royalty go to her college costs. Some of us are rather proud of her.

ISBN‎ 979-8320821917                               

See on Amazon

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