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- From: cuhes@csv.warwick.ac.uk (Malcolm McMahon)
- Newsgroups: sci.nanotech
- Subject: Re: Organic Machines?
- Keywords: Fundamentalists morphing Aliens Giger Bear _Queen of Angels_
- Message-ID: <Jan.21.23.18.33.1993.5385@planchet.rutgers.edu>
- Date: 22 Jan 93 04:18:34 GMT
- Sender: nanotech@planchet.rutgers.edu
- Organization: Computing Services, University of Warwick, UK
- Lines: 26
- Approved: nanotech@aramis.rutgers.edu
-
-
- I did have the interesting thought that animals can be regarded as a
- cell's solution to the problem of boldly going where no cell has gone
- before; as a way of generating a cell-friendly local environment in
- globally hostile environments and as a means of travelling vast
- distances.
-
- It strikes me that in many cases nanotechnology might benefit from the
- same approach for much the same reasons. For example nanomachines
- might build a temporary containment structure to fulfill their
- environmental requirements while they did the real job. More relevantly
- if you wanted a large group of nanomachines to do some job for you (we
- must think of a collective noun for a group of nanomachines) in an
- inaccessible place the best approach might be to have them form some
- temporary macroscopic mobile structure, probably with linked
- nanomachines forming a shell and fuel and raw materials inside. It
- might well ressemble an insect; it depends on the kind of mobility
- required. It might fly or burrow, crawl or swim. It might have wheels
- or legs, fins or jets. It might change shape to cope with different
- obstacles.
-
- Malcolm McMahon
-
- [That's essentially what the Utility Fog is... By the way I'll have
- a presentation of the U. Fog at VISION-21 (the NASA thing this March).
- --JoSH]
-