Elizabeth Barrette (ysabetwordsmith) wrote,
Elizabeth Barrette
ysabetwordsmith

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Triple Helix

While this is described as "cyborg DNA" it is not.  It is triple-helix meatlife DNA.  Cyborg DNA is made of metal or information, depending what type of cyborg it is and how that species reproduces.  Still, this is really cool stuff.
Tags: news, science
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  • 20 comments
And it dissolves in water, so you'd have to come up with an alternate metabolism using some other solvent -- methane, maybe? I bet that would turn your skin a weird color. But it would be worth it for the extra abilities the improved DNA would give you!

As long as no one poured any water on you, because you'd *melt*!
So what you're *actually* saying is that the Wicked Witch of the West was a cyborg? >.>
Or at least had that style of 3DNA.
Either way, this is a musical I would pay good money to see. *lol*
Okay, I will agree that a cyborg interpretation of The Wizard of Oz would be right up there with Hamlet: Shakespeare in the Bush. We could have SUCH fun with the Tin Woodsman!
Did you watch the 'Tin Man' miniseries? It had some cyborg elements. Although there it was the scarecrow who was an actual cyborg IIRC.
Alas, no, I haven't seen "Tin Man." We haven't been able to afford television reception for a long time.
You can either change the style of the 3rd DNA strand to be waterproof, or modify the surrounding metabolism to use something other than H20 as its fluid base. Yes, methane is a possibility for the latter. Ethane and acetyline have also been suggested.
You'd have to be careful about heat from bodily reactions for all three of these; they'd catch fire if the oxidation was strong enough! And free radicals are basically just O+ ions waiting to oxidize something...
That's probably why this kind of arrangement is usually suggested for iceworlds such as Titan, where such materials are a natural part of the environment. It would be difficult or impossible to make such a thing work here on Earth.
That reminds me, for some reason, of "The Seedling Stars" by James Blish.