Early science fiction (or its predecessor, “scientific romance”) often featured a lone scientist making a breakthrough in his (always his) home laboratory. These days, we know that important science isn’t done that way; you need a big lab with lots of expensive equipment and a dozen people with PhDs in order to achieve anything, and even then it takes years.
Only… maybe that’s not always the case.
Originally shared by Singularity Hub
“[I]n the same way that anyone can now experiment with software and electronics, we should be able to experiment with plug-and-play biotechnology.”
–Julie Legault, founder & CEO, Amino Labs http://suhub.co/2ir6nuu
Leave a Reply