Translating Shakespeare Into DNA
Could the solution to data storage turn out to be the carrying capacity of our own genetic material? More »
David Ewing Duncan is a journalist in San Francisco. He is also a television, radio, and film producer, and he has written eight books. His most recent e-book is entitled When I’m 164: The Science of Radical Life Extension, and What Happens If It Succeeds. More
Duncan's previous books include Experimental Man: What one man's body reveals about his future, your health, and our toxic world. He is a correspondent for Atlantic.com and the Chief Correspondent of public radio's Biotech Nation, broadcast on NPR Talk. He has been a commentator on NPR's Morning Edition, and a contributing editor for Wired, Discover and Conde Nast Portfolio. David has written for The New York Times, Fortune, National Geographic, Harper's, The Atlantic, and many other publications. He is a former special correspondent and producer for ABC Nightline, and correspondent for NOVA's ScienceNOW! He has won numerous awards including the Magazine Story of the Year from the American Association for the Advancement of Science. His articles have twice been cited in nominations for National Magazine Awards, and his work has appeared twice in The Best American Science and Nature Writing. He is the founding director of the Center of Life Science Policy at UC Berkeley, and a founder of the BioAgenda Institute. His website is www.davidewingduncan.com.
Could the solution to data storage turn out to be the carrying capacity of our own genetic material? More »
"Will you still need me? Will you still feed me?" More »
We may be closer than most realize to significant increases in life expectancy. More »
With a contentious case over patenting human DNA sequences back in court, we look to the history of radio for a creative approach to domain over the building blocks of people. More »
In Drop Dead Healthy, humorist and author AJ Jacobs set out to be the healthiest man alive - or else. A review and Q&A. More »
Two severely paralyzed people operated robotic arms and prosthetics using thoughts captured by implants in their brains, a new study disclosed. Inside the brain of a test subject known as S3, a symphony of neurons fired in her motor cortex one day in April last year. Paralyzed by stroke 15 years earlier, this 58 year-old woman with a bright smile and wearing a flashy red shirt imagined that her arm was working again and that it… More »
For some people, genes are key to predicting our future health. For others, genes as crystal balls are overhyped. Let's call it a truce because both sides are right. More »
A conversation with Google Venture's Bill Maris More »
TEDMED brought a relentless optimism about healthcare reform to a city of tired ideas. More is needed, however, to make a difference in Washington, DC. More »
Two speakers at TEDMED, 82 year-old E.O. Wilson and 34 year-old Jacob Scott, call for a balancing of experts and generalists in life sciences More »
The "rotting Y" theory, which suggested a literal end of the male sex chromosome, has finally been debunked by a new study in Nature. More »
In his new book, the cardiologist and director of the Scripps Translational Science Institute is on a tear to transform health using the latest tech. More »
An extra day means an extra day of interest on your debts. More »
Radical human modification is coming, like it or not, by the end of this century -- if not earlier. How much are you willing to alter yourself? More »
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