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biomolecular computer
An Israeli biomolecular computer that can “think”
By ISRAEL21c Staff AUGUST 24, 2009, 2:42 PM
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So small that a trillion of them can fit in a drop of water, a biomolecular computer made of DNA detected cancer in a test tube and released a molecule to destroy it.
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This was achieved with a 2004 version of the miniscule computer. The first version of the device was invented eight years ago by Prof. Ehud Shapiro and his team at the Weizmann Institute of Science’s biological chemistry department. It was the first autonomous programmable DNA computing device.
Shapiro’s team has just published an article about its advanced program that enables biomolecular computers to “think,” in the online edition of Nature and Nanotechnology.
The train of deduction that is the basis for the program was first proposed by Aristotle over 2000 years ago as a simple if/then (rule/fact) proposition: “All men are mortal. Socrates is a man. Therefore, Socrates is mortal.”
The team set up more complicated queries involving multiple rules and facts, and the DNA computing device was able to deduce the correct answers every time.
AUGUST 14, 2017, 8:23 AM
Oracle welcomes its first class of Israeli startups
Inaugural Oracle Startup Cloud Accelerator kicks off in Tel Aviv with five startups in predictive maintenance and cloud native networking.
Read more on: News
AUGUST 14, 2017, 8:23 AM
Oracle welcomes its first class of Israeli startups
Inaugural Oracle Startup Cloud Accelerator kicks off in Tel Aviv with five startups in predictive maintenance and cloud native networking.
By ISRAEL21c Staff Israel21c
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Nirit, DN Efraim 44805
Israel
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Pope Francis4 months ago i am not a believer of an organized religion what i know is there are people from diffrent religious sects. that are truly christian in words thoughts and actions. including the people who made this video. Godbless all of you wherever part of the world you may be.. jesus is coming soon!
THAT THE WORLD MAY KNOW The idea for That the World May Know films began in 1992 when Michigan entrepreneur Ed Prince became exposed to Ray Vander Laan's unique method of Bible teaching. Ray, or RVL as he is affectionately known, has always believed that to more greatly understand and appreciate the Bible, one had to have a sense of the land and the culture from which it sprang. Biblical analogies and examples, while meaningful and helpful even to this day, were first meant to convey God's truth to particular people in a particular time and place. So the more fully we can appreciate those times and places, the more fully we can respond to the power of the Word. So in 1992 Ed Prince generously offered to underwrite the development of a film series that would capture RVL's teachings to make them available to a wider audience. Director Bob Garner was secured, massive cameras were shipped to Israel, the first 5 sets were produced, and the broader church ate them up. Focus on the Family experienced a hunger for the series unlike anything they had ever seen. And that hunger has continued. In 2003, sets 6 and 7 were co-directed by Garner and John Grooters, and the style of the films became much more consistent with the experience of an actual RVL trip. The programs moved to HD and were shot in 16 x 9 aspect ratios. These teachings reached beyond Israel and brought viewers to sites like Ephesus, Laodicea, Cappadocia, Galatia, and other biblical locations in modern Turkey. The theme was discipleship as the lessons followed Paul through his first missionary journey.
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