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	<title>DIYbio &#187; meetings</title>
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	<link>http://diybio.org</link>
	<description>An Institution for the Amateur</description>
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		<title>Outlaw Biology at UCLA Symposium</title>
		<link>http://diybio.org/2010/01/29/outlaw-biology-at-ucla-symposium/</link>
		<comments>http://diybio.org/2010/01/29/outlaw-biology-at-ucla-symposium/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 30 Jan 2010 00:45:23 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>mac</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[meetings]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[synthetic biology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[talks]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[bioart]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[conference]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[outlaw]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://diybio.org/?p=787</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Chris Kelty just kicked out the Outlaw Biology Symposium here at the N(c)SI center at UCLA. &#8220;Outlaw is not the same thing as criminal,&#8221; he said. Marcus Wohlson and I live-blogged it here, with help from Charles Fracchia. There is a live stream. Some of us are taking living notes here: http://ietherpad.com/ZxNM3bq5zh Photos here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/macowell/sets/72157623185479749/. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_807" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 560px"><a href="http://diybio.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/beakerhat-e1264821136680.png"><img src="http://diybio.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/beakerhat-e1264821136680.png" alt="" title="beakerhat" width="550" height="204" class="size-full wp-image-807" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">This cowboy hat is acid-proof and recommended diybio safety-wear.</p></div>

<p>Chris Kelty just kicked out the Outlaw Biology Symposium here at the N(c)SI center at UCLA.  &#8220;Outlaw is not the same thing as criminal,&#8221; he said.</p>

<p><a href="http://twitter.com/MWohlsenAP">Marcus Wohlson</a> and I live-blogged it here, with help from <a href="http://twitter.com/charlesfracchia">Charles Fracchia</a>.</p>

<p>There is a <a href="http://sinapse.arc2.ucla.edu/streaming/livestream.asx">live stream</a>.</p>

<p>Some of us are taking living notes here: <a href="http://ietherpad.com/ZxNM3bq5zh">http://ietherpad.com/ZxNM3bq5zh</a></p>

<p>Photos here: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/macowell/sets/72157623185479749/">http://www.flickr.com/photos/macowell/sets/72157623185479749/</a>.</p>

<h2>Panelists</h2>

<p>Each <a href="http://outlawbiology.net/symposium/participants/">panelist</a> gets 2 slides.  Starting w/ <strong>Jason Bobe</strong>&#8216;s 2nd, I&#8217;ll try to take a picture of each one.</p>

<p><strong>Hugh Reinhoff</strong> &#8211; tons of sequencing and searching for the mutation causing his daughters&#8217;s disease, narrowing in on the target.  May start biochemistry in mice models soon.</p>

<p><strong>Philip Lukeman</strong> &#8211; made 100nm wide gear out of DNA origami. Working on nanoscale devices. Demoing open-source software tomorrow that takes in a drawing and spits out oligo strings that will self-assemble via the origami techniques into the shape.  I&#8217;m thinking&#8230; we should fold some DNA into cool shapes and send the results to<a href="http://www.aspexcorp.com/resources/send_sample.html"> ASPEX for free electron microscopy</a>.</p>

<p><strong>Meredith Patterson</strong> &#8211; &#8220;work in linguistics, data mining, computer security, and biology all have something in common: finding patterns.&#8221;  She shows a picture of <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lactobacillus_acidophilus">Lactobacteria acidophilus</a>. &#8220;Come to the demo tomorrow to get some of it&#8217;s plasmids.&#8221;  She mentioned the crypto-crusade of the cypherpunks in the &#8217;90s and read from an updated cypherpunk manifesto, roughly &#8220;biohackers are dedicated to putting the tools of scientific enquiry into the hands of everyone.  Come, let us research together.&#8221;</p>

<p><strong>Gaymon Bennett</strong> &#8211; an ethicist and theologian focused on synthetic biology, &#8220;how is biotechnology contributing to the good forms of life?&#8221;  <em>Bios Technika</em>.  &#8220;I think the kind of moral life we would be engaging in when doing diybio is very different from the kind of moral life one would engage in when doing big bio.&#8221;</p>

<p><strong>Victoria Vesna</strong> &#8211; artist at UCLA.  http://artsci.ucla.edu.<br />
Visiting professor at Parson&#8217;s School of Design</p>

<p>Gravitated toward university setting because bioartists have had trouble finding a place in the gallery system. After arriving, she says she &#8220;started slowly moving toward the other side of campus [i.e. toward science labs].&#8221; Not only because there were &#8220;more money and toys there,&#8221; she said, but because it was &#8220;like walking into the most amazing sculpture studios.&#8221;</p>

<p>Shows a slide of piece she did called &#8220;Blue Morph&#8221;.  The flashes of light were translated into sound, flashes from the metamorphasis of a blue morpho caterpillar into a butterfly.</p>

<p>She talked about her new HOX project.  She&#8217;s thinking about turnining different animal&#8217;s homebox gene&#8217;s into sounds, or taking samples and making them into poker chips (since Chris is from Nevada).  I think she should use our k12 E. coli button technique to make</p>

<p>The way art is done, taught, critiqued has also changed. Looking for public input for next HOX project: The best idea gets $1,000!  Comment and suggest at  http://artsci.ucla.edu/hox/.</p>

<p><strong>Roger Brent</strong> &#8211; Badass Basic Scientist.  Ran the <a ref="http://www.molsci.org/">Molecular Science Institute,/a>.  Drew Endy and Rob Carlson were hanging out there in the early 2000s.</p>

<p>&#8220;We’re kind of trying to map some formalism from the understanding of the physicis of information, information theory, back onto molecular components.&#8221;</p>

<p>Shows slide of Rolling Stone article on 1975 Asilomar conference (famed attempt to self-regulate then-new recombinant DNA technology): “The Pandora’s Box Congress: 140 Scientists Ask: Now that We Can Rewrite the Genetic Code What Are We Going to Say?” Jokes about the lack of diversity: “too much male facial hair on display.”</p>

<p>Since Asilomar, we&#8217;ve done a lot.  Mentions Lai et al 2006 &#8211; Omega-3 pigs, &#8220;bacon that&#8217;s good for your heart!&#8221;</p>

<p>&#8220;In 1975, there were effectively 300 people hacking DNA.  In 2010, >350,000 who have hacked DNA in the last 10 years.  In 2025?  Millions.&#8221;  Why?  Well, there are great informational resources today.  For instance, Current Protocols in Molecular Biology and it&#8217;s rival, Molecular Cloning, as well as a Yakuza bootleg cloning book from Japan.</p>

<blockquote>
  <p>100,000 of these manuals sold in 2002.  >1,000,000 in 2010.  And in China?  And that&#8217;s totally ignoring China!</p>
</blockquote>

<p>Points out that since 1975, very few deaths have been attributed to recombinant DNA technology. In the &#8220;American case,&#8221; he says, those have mostly been due to gene therapy performed by &#8220;cowboy docs.&#8221;</p>

<p>Still, suggests that the rapid expansion in accessibility of biotechnologies suggests that, regarding Asilomar, &#8220;this particular self-governance regime has passed its sell-by date.”</p>

<p>&#8220;Dynamite makes all men equal, and therefore makes them free&#8221; &#8212; Albert Parsons, 1887.  &#8220;If anyone reading this has any differences at all with what Parsons meant by it&#8230; then we need to start a dialogue.  The locus of technology is not hardware.  It&#8217;s the people. Let&#8217;s talk.&#8221;</p>

<p><em>Intermission Time</em></p>

<h2> Questions &#038; Answers </h2>

<p><strong>What technologies would be enabling for DIYbiologists?</strong></p>

<p><strong>Lukeman</strong>: low-cost atomic force microscope and a low-cost electron microscope.</p>

<p><strong>Patterson</strong>: All imaging equipment! I would kill for an fMRI.</p>

<p><strong>Brent</strong>: one way to bound this question is to consider what you&#8217;re trying to acheive.  If you are trying to do microbial synthetic biology, you could build a great lab for around a million dollars!</p>

<p><strong>Rienhoff</strong>: I built a PCR lab for $5000. “It’s not that expensive if you have a relatively narrow goal of characterizing genes.”</p>

<p><strong>Bobe</strong> points to Joseph Jackson in the front row with his LavaAmp _ a low-cost pocket-sized thermocycler _ to make the point that DIY biologists are well at work on building cheaper versions of lab gear to increase accessibility.</p>

<p><strong>Vecca</strong>: We should open university labs to the equiptment.  And donate/recycle the 3-year-old used equipment to establish public labs.</p>

<p><strong>Patterson</strong>: Yeah! I love <a href="http://www.seedinglabs.org/">http://www.seedinglabs.org/</a>.</p>

<p><strong>Audience</strong>: <a href="http://arxiv.org/abs/0911.4289#">ScienceShops</a>, like in Europe!</p>

<p><strong>Me</strong>: any tools that speed up the interaction with biological devices.  Interactivity is key to play, and play is key to intuition, and intuition is key to innovation.</p>

<p><strong>Lukeman</strong>: Doing stuff in silica versus doing stuff in the real world is different. &#8220;There will always be speed limits to doing stuff in the real world.&#8221; (Narrator: let&#8217;s make an xbox game of &#8220;the inner life of the cell&#8221; then)</p>

<p><strong>Patterson</strong>: The <a href="http://hackerspaces.org">hackerspace</a> movement!</p>

<p><strong>Narrator</strong>: Hackerspaces are becoming “centers of inquiry for anyone who just wants to walk in.</p>

<p><em>Discussion turns to the patient-driven research movement</em>.</p>

<p>In the audience is Alice Wexler of the <a href="http://www.hdfoundation.org/bios/alicew.php">Hereditary Disease Foundation,</a> which began four decades ago as a family effort to trace the genetic origins of Huntington&#8217;s disease.</p>

<p><strong>Audience</strong>:<strong> Why are we interested in diybio</strong>?  Is it for entertainment, or for survival?  I started a small lab for artists at UCI.  But in the end, we didn&#8217;t have the people power.  I&#8217;m an artist.  I didn&#8217;t have enough time to maintain the equipment and to figure everything out.  <strong>So where are the situations where the Space and Equipment and People come together</strong>?  I see a lot of really cool geeks here&#8230; but I see everyone alone.  Working in isolation.</p>

<p><strong>Brent</strong>: Well, I just want to say a person who wants to do art would be welcome in my lab.</p>

<p><strong>Rienhoff</strong>: It might seem like a solitary activity, but I am connected to a very large community. I don’t feel like I am working in isolation.</p>

<p><strong>Me</strong>: Roger, could you describe a page in a cloning manual and how much those publications cost?</p>

<p><strong>Brent</strong>: Full subscription to “Current Protocols” used to run $1,200 a year. Anyone in UC system has access electroincally. Everyone knows someone.</p>

<p><strong>Me</strong>: And there are torrents!  But my point is that these protocols are often just a little too technical or telegraphic for the beginner to actually be able to use them.  They are written for grad students. We need new manuals.  We need books with the same technicality but written for high school students.</p>

<p><strong>Bennett</strong>: The real test is to go home and boot up our Internet and see if we can learn how to do this.  But why should you care about diybio?  Find this essay: Weber&#8217;s <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Science_as_a_Vocation">Science as a Vocation</a>.  Science is hard and takes incredible enthusiasm and drive.  We need to think about the why!  It&#8217;s not just to do something cool. (Narrator: we might have missed the nuance of his discourse).</p>

<p><strong>Audience</strong>: a sociologist, compares &#8220;outlaw biologists&#8221; to buffalo soldiers, i.e. outsiders who at the same time have connections to powerful institutions. Asks panelists to reflect on connection.</p>

<p><strong>Rienhoff</strong>: When you&#8217;re outside the institution, you&#8217;re allowed to speculate and connect. The dots can be much farther apart. You can go way out and not take professional risks doing that. Being on the outside is &#8220;stretching the scientific method.&#8221;</p>

<p><strong>Patterson</strong>: You have the freedom to look into questions that haven&#8217;t seen a lot of focus because projects would generally benefit marginal populations. Much of the resistance I&#8217;ve seen to my work comes from &#8220;upper-class liberal white people&#8221; who fear genetic engineering but lack sensitivity and awareness to its potential to benefit the poor and marginalized.</p>

<p><strong>Lukeman</strong>: Who remembers &#8220;The Island of the Misfit Toys?&#8221; I think a bunch of the scientists you see here could be described as being from the island of the misfit toys. Scientists are not homogeneous, but often &#8220;deeply weird&#8221; people who have useful and not-so-useful ideas.</p>

<p><strong>Bennett</strong>: A concrete example of the adjacencies between big bio and so-called diybio: consider the work of iGEM teams. It&#8217;s generating new kinds of participation, proliferating around the world.  Getting some purchase on the movent among and across these places&#8230; should help us answer the question.</p>

<p><strong>Audience</strong>: <strong>As exciting as outlaw projects are for lowering barriers to participation, how do you envision the work changing the interaction of the broader public with the science?</strong></p>

<p><strong>Meredith</strong>: If I could llive in my ideal world, it would be one in which people actively realized how much they use the scientific method every day.</p>

<p><strong>Brent</strong>: Americans idolize the autodidact, the tinkerer, the Thomas Edisons. If biohacking captures the public imagination, regardless of technological achievement, a broader dialogue about science will be opened.</p>

<p><strong>Bennett</strong>: The kinds of things we can do well in labs today can seem boring. What goes on at the bench every day is not the grand story about the human genome and the code of codes changing your life. A real problem: Combining a frank discussion of what we can and can’t do with fostering enthusiasm for trying.</p>

<p><strong>Lukeman</strong>: Hard to convey to people what we’re doing without resorting to the five-minute montage. (a la CSI).</p>

<p><em>The conversation switches to citizen science</em></p>

<p><strong>Audience</strong>: I want to point out <a href="http://scienceforcitizens.net/">http://scienceforcitizens.net/</a> (any maybe <a href="http://citizensforscience.org/">http://citizensforscience.org/</a> ?), and tell you that I&#8217;m going to a citizen science literacy conference later this year run by <a href="http://www.copusproject.org/">http://www.copusproject.org/</a>.  What messages do you want me to bring to that conference?</p>

<p><strong>Kelty</strong>: I encourage you to just focus on enabling citizen science.  The literacy will follow.</p>

<p><strong>Audience</strong>: I am a gerontologist here at UCLA.  Most citizens don&#8217;t have any science understanding at all&#8230; but I think it&#8217;s changing.  Someday there will be science experts who are high school students.  Freeman Dyson&#8217;s <em>Domesticating Biotechnology</em>.</p>

<p><strong>Jankowski</strong>: I think we would all agree: biology is hard.  We&#8217;ve talked about the available electronic resources, and the cheap ways at getting lab equipment.  So let&#8217;s talk about how to develop access to experts who can teach us.</p>

<p><strong>Fracchia</strong>: We&#8217;re running periodic classes at the <a href="http://bosslab.org">bosslab</a> in Boston.</p>

<p><strong>Littrell</strong>: And tomorrow we&#8217;re starting DIYbio-SF here.</p>

<p><strong>Audience</strong>: We&#8217;ve talked a lot about DIYbio practice, but I&#8217;m more interested in the theory.  I&#8217;m a scholar who studies 19th century renegade scientists.  I want to know what the big ideas are or will be coming out of this community and knocking on the door of orthodox science.</p>

<p><strong>Lukeman</strong>: Outlaws don&#8217;t need your stinkin&#8217; metaphysics.</p>

<p>THE END.</p>

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<enclosure url="http://sinapse.arc2.ucla.edu/streaming/livestream.asx" length="304" type="video/x-ms-asf" />
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>diybio-boston meetup at Sprout 22 Nov 09</title>
		<link>http://diybio.org/2009/12/02/diybio-boston-meetup-at-sprout-22-nov-09/</link>
		<comments>http://diybio.org/2009/12/02/diybio-boston-meetup-at-sprout-22-nov-09/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 03 Dec 2009 04:41:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>mac</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Boston DIYbio]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[meetings]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://diybio.org/?p=645</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[@molecularist blogged about the 22 Nov 09 diybio-boston meetup at sprout and recently posted a great little video of the tour. You can see us setting up Sprout and touring through the mobile lab. Read Charlie&#8217;s full post for more info.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><object width="580" height="325"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/HcZtnT8mbaA&#038;hl=en_US&#038;fs=1&#038;hd=1"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/HcZtnT8mbaA&#038;hl=en_US&#038;fs=1&#038;hd=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="580" height="325"></embed></object></p>

<p><a href="http://twitter.com/@molecularist">@molecularist</a> <a href="http://www.molecularist.com/lifeblog/2009/11/video-diybio-meetup-22nov09.html">blogged</a> about the 22 Nov 09 <a href="http://diybio.org/boston/">diybio-boston meetup</a> at <a href="http://thesprouts.org/">sprout</a> and recently posted a great little <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HcZtnT8mbaA&amp;fmt=22">video</a> of the tour. You can see us setting up Sprout and touring through the mobile lab.  Read Charlie&#8217;s <a href="http://www.molecularist.com/lifeblog/2009/11/video-diybio-meetup-22nov09.html">full post</a> for more info.</p>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>iGEM 09 Jamboree DIYbio meetup recap</title>
		<link>http://diybio.org/2009/11/18/igem09-jamboree-diybio-meetup/</link>
		<comments>http://diybio.org/2009/11/18/igem09-jamboree-diybio-meetup/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 19 Nov 2009 06:49:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>mac</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Boston DIYbio]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Groups]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[San Francisco DIYbio]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[iGEM]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[meetings]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://diybio.org/?p=625</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A bunch of interesting projects ideas were discussed at the DIYbio meetup during the iGEM Jamboree 2 weeks ago &#8211; here are my notes: Yashas Shetty wants to organize an international DIY microscope building session and subsequent videoconference for early December based on his DIY Microscope guide.  See http://hackteria.org/wiki/index.php/DIY_microscopy for instructions Alex Hornstein told us [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A bunch of interesting projects ideas were discussed at the DIYbio meetup during the iGEM Jamboree 2 weeks ago &#8211; here are my notes:</p>

<ul>
    <li><a href=" http://hackteria.org/?p=52">Yashas Shetty</a> wants to organize an international DIY microscope building session and subsequent videoconference for early December based on his DIY Microscope guide.  See http://hackteria.org/wiki/index.php/DIY_microscopy for instructions</li><br />
    <li><a href="http://artiswrong.com/wordpress/?p=290">Alex Hornstein</a> told us he had just been diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes and wanted to synthesize his own insulin, DIY-style. Would we help? Hell yes! A grad student from Harvard who had dropped in pointed out that the Registry of Standard Biological Parts already has an insulin-generating biobrick. Alex and the grad student went off to talk.This is radical self-actualized DIY theraputics. Extremely controversial.</li><br />
    <li>A variety of brave souls volunteered to start writing for the (so far, low-volume) blog at diybio.org in an attempt to amplify the signal that inevitably gets lost in the noise on the diybio mailing list and in the DIYbio ecosystem of blogs. Want to help? Email contact@diybio.org for an account.</li><br />
    <li>volunteers from each DIYbio region present (Ellen from <a href="http://diybionyc.blogspot.com/">NYC</a>, Tito from <a href="http://diybio.org/sf/">SF</a>, Paul from <a href="http://diybio.mit.edu/">MIT</a> &amp; myself from <a href="http://diybio.org/boston/">Boston</a>) thought it would be useful to describe the organizational blueprint for the local group in a central place, perhaps on the new forums, for comparisons sake and to help new groups bootstrap more intelligently and more quickly.</li><br />
    <li>Alec Nielsen, myself, Jason Bobe, David Thompson, and iGEM volunteer from MSU, and the DIYbio-NYC folks all were excited about developing a standard DIY-friendly <a href="http://barcoding.si.edu/protocols.html">DNA barcoding</a> protocol. 16s rDNA sequencing of soil microbes was the initial suggestion, followed by interest in plant barcoding, in which sample collection and genome isolation may potentially be easier (using the COI gene).</li><br />
    <li>I announced the <a href="http://bosslab.org">Boston Open Source Science Lab</a>, a volunteer research center where PhDs and amateurs can work together to develop and document low-cost, low-waste &#8220;<a href="http://scienceblogs.com/commonknowledge/2009/11/distributed_science_part_2.php">open source</a>&#8221; tools and techniques for biotechnology and synthetic biology. 12-month goal: build and distribute one unencumbered (IP-free or freely-licensed) BioBrick under the new <a href="http://openwetware.org/wiki/The_BioBricks_Foundation:BPA">BioBrick Public Agreement</a> to the DIYbio community, preferably a device with an obvious and fun phenotype.  In the process develop comprehensive and practical resources and protocols for DIY biobrick creation and use that bridge the gap between high-school and PhD-level lab instructional material.  Along the way, we&#8217;ll figure out how to make it all financially sustainable with a combination of workshop tuition, membership fees, donations, and grants.  We might even be able to put together some DIY kits.</li><br />
</ul>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Bay Area DIYbio meetup 1</title>
		<link>http://diybio.org/2009/01/19/bay-area-diybio-meetup-1/</link>
		<comments>http://diybio.org/2009/01/19/bay-area-diybio-meetup-1/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 20 Jan 2009 07:05:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>mac</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[meetings]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[bay area]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[meetups]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://diybio.org/?p=169</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Six DIYbiologists met at Frjtz in San Francisco on Saturday, January 19th for the first time. Here are some new ideas we tossed around: BioWeather Maps Jason Bobe, visiting from Boston, introduced BioWeather Maps. Imagine a day in April, DIYbiologists from all around the country swab crosswalk buttons in their town with a Q-tip. Each [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Six DIYbiologists</strong> met at Frjtz in San Francisco on Saturday, January 19th for the first time. Here are some new ideas we tossed around:</p>

<div id="attachment_176" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 310px"><img class="size-medium wp-image-176" title="Bay Area DIYbio meetup 1" src="http://diybio.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/photo-300x224.jpg" alt="DIYbiologists John, Spencer, and Marnia enjoy Frjtz fries" width="300" height="224" /><p class="wp-caption-text">DIYbiologists John, Spencer, and Marnia enjoy Frjtz fries</p></div>

<ol>
<li><p>BioWeather Maps Jason Bobe, visiting from Boston, introduced BioWeather Maps. Imagine a day in April, DIYbiologists from all around the country swab crosswalk buttons in their town with a Q-tip. Each sample might contain 10 or 100 different bacteria. How do swabs from the subway in Boston differ from swabs from a hospital in San Francisco? Jason Bobe wants to find out.</p></li>
<li><p>Every Orchid is a Clone Marnia Johnston proposed a bio-art piece &#8211; take samples of orchids worldwide and show that the most popular orchids are all clones of eachother.</p></li>
<li>Open Gel Box 2.0 Tito showed off the schematic for a DIY kit to make your own bigger, badder, gel electrophoresis chamber</li>
</ol>

<p>For our next meeting, we want to get our hands in some actual wet work. Marnia and Spencer are investigating public labs, as well as having DIYers teach hands-on biotech classes at the museums/science centers in SF.</p>

<p>Tito Jankowski: Open Gel Box, “let’s make all biotech equipment pocket sized”
Jason Bobe &#8211; BioWeather Maps, visualizing genomes
Noah Flower: the Monitor research group
Marnia Johnston: Artist, wants to start a bioart project to show that all the orchids in the world are clones of each other
Spencer Pearson: Quilt kit entrepreneur, knows about licensing, wants DIYbio as a hobby
John Cumbers: NASA AMES, all around cool guy, wants to use biotech to live forever and colonize other planets</p>

<p style="text-align: right;">By <a href="http://titojankowski.com/?p=108">Tito Jankowski</a></p>
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		<title>Don&#8217;t Phage Me, Bro</title>
		<link>http://diybio.org/2008/05/24/dont-phage-me-bro/</link>
		<comments>http://diybio.org/2008/05/24/dont-phage-me-bro/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 25 May 2008 01:31:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jason Bobe</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[meetings]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://diybio.jayunit.net/?p=3</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In the packed back-room of Asgard&#8217;s Irish Pub in Cambridge, a diverse crowd of 25+ enthusiasts gathered to discuss the next big thing in biology: amateurs. Mackenzie (Mac) Cowell led-off the night with an overview of recent history in biological engineering, and asked the question: Can molecular biology or biotechnology be a hobby? Will advancements [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In the packed back-room of Asgard&#8217;s Irish Pub in Cambridge, a diverse crowd of 25+ enthusiasts gathered to discuss the next big thing in biology: amateurs.  Mackenzie (Mac) Cowell led-off the night with an overview of recent history in biological engineering, and asked the question: Can molecular biology or biotechnology be a hobby?  Will advancements in synthetic biology be the tipping point that enables DIYers and garagistas to make meaningful contributions to the biological sciences, outside of traditional institutions?   Can <a href="http://www.diybio.org/">DIYbio.org</a> be the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homebrew_Computer_Club">Homebrew Computer Club</a> of biology?<br /><br />Noting that he was a recent expatriate from the institutional setting himself, Mac wondered out loud whether he would ever again be able to wield a pipette.  A proliferation of projects and protocols available online make his prospects, and the prospects of the 25 or so individuals attending the first DIYbio meeting, quite good.<br /><br />Over the noisy background of Thursday night pub chatter, just a few blocks from MIT, attendees around the room took a few moments to introduce themselves and their interests.  &#8220;I&#8217;ve been a software engineer my whole life and I&#8217;m looking for something new,&#8221; said one attendee, who was accompanied by his enthusiastic teenage son.  Also present were a dozen or so graduate students, several software engineers, journalist and her boyfriend, and even a few professors from Harvard and MIT.<br /><br />Mac flipped through slides indicating that &#8220;<a href="http://makezine.com/07/">backyard biology</a>&#8221; is alive and well.  One illustrated guide found online describes how to <a href="http://vesolt.free.fr/dna.htm">isolate DNA</a> using chemicals found in every kitchen cupboard.  Need more DNA?  A <a href="http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn11763&amp;feedId=online-news_rss20">$10 PCR device</a> assembled from <a href="http://www.scribd.com/doc/104545/Mini-PCR-Machine">basic parts</a> might do the trick.  And a recipe from the pages of MAKE magazine provides the know-how for armchair anthropologists to combine a few legos, a source of current, and a cheap enzyme kit to generate <a href="http://makezine.com/07/fingerprinting/">DNA fingerprints</a>.<br /><br />While backyard biology promises to be an avenue for individuals to flex their intellectual muscles and explore the molecular world around them, Jason Bobe argued that the possible impacts of a DIY world go well beyond that.  Amateurs and hobbyists are making significant contributions to engineering, environmental sensing, and even medical devices.<br /><br />A ham-radio hacker, turned reluctant cancer patient, recently combined his expertise about radio waves with spare parts from his home to build a <a href="http://gizmodo.com/379952/guy-invents-potential-cancer-cure-with-radio-machine-built-out-of-pie-pans-and-hot-dogs">prototype device</a> capable of targeting the destruction of cancer cells.  This device is undergoing clinical trials at two major medical research centers, after attracting investments from venture capitalists and the collaboration of a Nobel Laureate who was intrigued by preliminary results generated from the DIYers garage.<br /><br />Undergraduate participants of <a href="http://igem.org/">iGEM</a> are increasingly capable of engineering biological systems that have the potential to do real work in the world.  <a href="http://www.technologyreview.com/read_article.aspx?id=17716">Banana-scented E. coli</a> might be fun, but <a href="http://parts2.mit.edu/wiki/index.php/Arsenic_Biosensor">arsenic sensing bacteria</a> for identifying contaminated water supplies might actually save lives.  If undergraduates are able to design these systems, who else might?<br /><br />Model organisms like E. coli are still frustratingly difficult to engineer, even for professional biologists.  &#8220;If amateurs can help make biological engineering more reliable, I certainly would find that of value,&#8221; a graduate student remarked, half-jokingly.  &#8220;I would think that amateurs would prefer to experiment with organisms that can be more readily inspected without expensive instruments,&#8221; said another.  &#8220;Forget E. coli.  They&#8217;re too microscopic.  How about a plant, like <a href="http://openwetware.org/wiki/Physcomitrella_patens">moss</a>?&#8221;<br /><br />Jason cautioned that not everyone is ready to embrace a DIY biotech culture.  In NYC, a <a href="http://future.iftf.org/2008/01/use-a-sensor-go.html">proposal</a> is currently under review that would make possession of environmental sensing devices a potential criminal offense.  Tom Knight, an MIT professor and open source biology advocate, reminded the crowd of the recent attempt to prosecute artist <a href="http://www.10zenmonkeys.com/2007/09/26/art-or-bioterrorism-who-cares/">Steve Kurtz</a> for his home biology projects.  &#8220;Is biological engineering fundamentally more dangerous than the risks posed by other fields, such as mechanical engineering?&#8221; asked John Cumbers, a graduate student at Brown University.<br /><br />Mac proposed organizing a Boston-based bio-workshop for sharing equipment, space, and other resources.  He flashed a few screenshots of <a href="http://techshop.ws/">Techshop</a>, a west coast organization that has established nine shared workspaces for amateur technologists.   &#8220;This same model could work for biotechnology hobbyists,&#8221; he added.<br /><br />-Jason Bobe<br />Report from the 1st DIYbio.org meet-up<br />Thursday May 1st, 2008<br />Asgard&#8217;s Pub (Cambridge, MA)</p>
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