Meeting at the Docks #37: Science!
Greetings, Cosby Kids!
It’s incredible whenever new advancements are made in science. The little kid in me who grew up thinking we would be going to Mars and beyond, or have flying cars, or have perfected artificial intelligence always gets a little excited whenever I actually see something that was previously science fiction become science fact.
But at the same time, that little kid’s heart always dies a little inside when those same discoveries are made. Maybe it’s because in the grand scheme of things even our biggest advancements still fall under the shadow of the reality that we still have a long way to go to achieve the things the child in me thought he would get to see in his lifetime. For every successfully cloned sheep, dark matter discovery, or sub-atomic particle that travels backward in time, there’s still the realization that we have yet to travel outside our own solar system, effectively slow the aging process, or even cure the common cold.
But this week? This week the Saturday morning cartoon-watching, cereal-eating, pajama-wearing me from yesteryear is looking on wide-eyed and in wonder – a Japanese/US research team has created a molecular computer that can handle complex computations like a computer, yet functions more like a real brain. It can even heal and repair itself when it has a problem.
Even more astounding is that the computer is only two molecules thick.
This is pretty mind-blowing stuff. I mean, just around thirty years ago we were still in our computer infancy. Atari was the big console of the time. Arcades still existed to give gamers young and old a chance to play the latest creations (with ash trays!). William Shatner was shilling for the Commodore Vic-20, the “wonder computer of the 1980s” while any system that was designed for heavy computations still took up quite a bit of room space and most likely involved reel-to-reel tape for data recording.
Yet, only thirty years later we’ve achieved something that by 1980s standards would still be a dream in the distance. Only it’s not quite that distant. It’s here. Now.
Immediate images of Skynet rising to smite us all aside, this is one of those major steps forward in science that has me hopeful and excited for what’s to come in our immediate future, despite the fact that it sometimes seems like our society’s progress seems a little uneven at times. Achievements like this help to remind me that though it sometimes seems like the fantastical science we see in our favorite fiction may not become a reality within our lifetimes, occasionally we get to see the extraordinary the very next day. We may not have a colony on the moon yet or mastered teleportation, but right now we are one step closer to creating Data.
Let’s hope it isn’t Lore.
The Don blinded himself with science, then got the hiccups.
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May 1st, 2010 at 9:38 pm
wow… that’s awesome and might revolutionize how small some gadgets can really get…. 0.0