Anonymous ID: 04c37a April 23, 2020, 4:04 a.m. No.8894567   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>4594 >>4597 >>4675 >>4680 >>4707 >>4886 >>5076 >>5087 >>5201 >>5222 >>5235 >>5297 >>5304 >>5320

>>8894530

Read carefully.

>https://www.harvardmagazine.com/2011/01/virus-sized-transistors

But when his team coated the hairpin nanowire with a fatty lipid layer (the same substance cell membranes are made of), the device was easily pulled into the cell via membrane fusion, a process related to the one cells use to engulf viruses and bacteria. This innovation is important, Lieber explains, because it indicates that when a man-made structure is as small as a virus or bacteria, it can behave the way biological structures do.

 

Tests of the device indicate that it could be used not only to measure activity within neurons, heart cells, and muscle fibers, for example, but also to measure two distinct signals within a single cell simultaneously–perhaps even the workings of intracellular organelles, the functional units within cells that generate energy, fold proteins, process sugars, and perform other critical functions.

 

And because a transistor also allows the application of a voltage pulse, such devices might one day provide hybrid biological-digital computation, or deep-brain stimulation for Parkinson’s patients, or serve as an interface for a prosthetic that requires information processing at the point where it attaches to its owner.

 

“Digital electronics are so powerful that they dominate our daily lives,” Lieber points out. “When scaled down, the difference between digital and living systems blurs, so that you have an opportunity to do things that sound like science fiction–things that people have only dreamed about.”

Anonymous ID: 04c37a April 23, 2020, 4:49 a.m. No.8894707   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>5320

>>8894567

>>8894594

>>8894597

JBW?

 

https://www.extremetech.com/extreme/152074-stanford-creates-biological-transistors-the-final-step-towards-computers-inside-living-cells

https://archive.is/F8eBz

March 29, 2013

numerous research groups have successfully stored data in DNA — and Stanford has already developed an ingenious method of using the M13 virus to transmit strands of DNA between cells. (See: Harvard cracks DNA storage, crams 700 terabytes of data into a single gram.) In short, all of the building blocks of a biological computer are now in place.

Anonymous ID: 04c37a April 23, 2020, 5:03 a.m. No.8894747   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>8894606

>Information Operations use our powerful innate drives or instincts against us.

The conscious and intelligent manipulation of the organized habits and opinions of the masses is an important element in democratic society.

Those who manipulate this unseen mechanism of society constitute an invisible government which is the true ruling power of our country.

…We are governed, our minds are molded, our tastes formed, our ideas suggested, largely by men we have never heard of…

– Edward Bernays

 

https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/the-secular-shepherd/201604/edward-bernays-uncle-freud-and-betty-crocker

Anonymous ID: 04c37a April 23, 2020, 6:41 a.m. No.8895320   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>8895087

Not sure. Would seem like vaccines would be the most effective delivery system. They already figured out how to encode data in DNA and store in viruses in 2013.

>>8894530

>>8894680

>>8894697

May have found something. Read this:

https://greatgameindia.com/chinese-agent-charles-lieber-his-virus-transmitters/

What’s more concerning is that the affidavit released by the federal prosecutors states that Leiber signed an agreement between Harvard and Wuhan Insitute of Technology. According to the affidavit, the purpose of the agreement was to “carry out advanced research and development of nanowire-based lithium-ion batteries with high performance for electric vehicles.”

 

Now this:

https://microbewiki.kenyon.edu/index.php/Virus_Selection_for_Lithium_Ion_Battery_Formation

Angela Belcher along with a team of scientist from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) as well as scientist around the world, have been using M13 bacteriophage viruses to construct high power lithium ion batteries through modification of coat proteins.

 

And this:

>>8894707

numerous research groups have successfully stored data in DNA — and Stanford has already developed an ingenious method of using the M13 virus to transmit strands of DNA between cells.

 

"development of nanowire-based lithium-ion batteries" may have been cover for Lieber to work on the M13 virus in further development of his transistor virus work.

>>8894567