The entire biotechnology endeavor needs to take a huge step back - show some humility, admit how little we know, and stop pushing out dangerous and deadly products.
It seems that the huge financial success of biotech so far, arose from creating the virus that made us sick, then producing a corresponding “vaccine” that caused many serious adverse events, including death. Hopefully, Elon can improve on this dismal record.
In my mind, Assembly is the computer program that has most in common with RNA and DNA. The ability to self modify the code is a deliberate feature of Assembly. This got us to the moon and back in the 1960s. Assembly is notoriously difficult to write and debug.
Although virtually none of the code running the Internet (with the exception of some core parts of Unix) is written in assembler. Anything that has human interaction (as is all meaningful coding) is subject to the foundational level of human error (somewhere between five and 10%) and that cannot be fixed except by failing, and repairing, and, as we have discovered with endless zero-day exploits, failing again.
It seems that the huge financial success of biotech so far, arose from creating the virus that made us sick, then producing a corresponding “vaccine” that caused many serious adverse events, including death. Hopefully, Elon can improve on this dismal record.
In my mind, Assembly is the computer program that has most in common with RNA and DNA. The ability to self modify the code is a deliberate feature of Assembly. This got us to the moon and back in the 1960s. Assembly is notoriously difficult to write and debug.
Have you noticed how buggy the internet is?
The human fall out from the debugging is painful to watch.
Although virtually none of the code running the Internet (with the exception of some core parts of Unix) is written in assembler. Anything that has human interaction (as is all meaningful coding) is subject to the foundational level of human error (somewhere between five and 10%) and that cannot be fixed except by failing, and repairing, and, as we have discovered with endless zero-day exploits, failing again.
You are correct, not much Assembly out there. The second paragraph was meant to be a separate thought.
I'm new at this, been too sick to work for nearly 20 years and still struggling with "medically unrecognized symptoms".