That seems so… odd. It’s like building a working computer out of tens of thousands of usb thumb drives.
Haha, it is quite a good analogy! The drives even contain schematics on how to build a really fancy computer, but they are very complex and if you try to change something it usually breaks down. So in the end you just write really simple instructions to each drive, throw them in a box, shake it, and discover that the drives themselves self-assembled into the computer you wanted.
Yeah and if you do it enough times, the usb drives might assemble into grey goo.
DNA nanotechnology is amazing! You can see a 3D visualisation of the assembled structure here: https://nanobase.org/structure/196
WOW, what a great link. I have posted a stereo image of the structure to both 3D anaglyph view and CrossView
Hi there! Looks like you linked to a Lemmy community using a URL instead of its name, which doesn’t work well for people on different instances. Try fixing it like this: !3danaglyph@lemmy.world, !crossview@lemmy.world
Good Bot
Thank you! And really nice! What software do you use to create those? If you’re interested, you can also load the “dat” and “top” files from Nanobase into https://sulcgroup.github.io/oxdna-viewer/ and export files for Blender, etc. I’m also trying to get this to work: https://akodiat.github.io/oxJenga/, were you can interact with a live DNA origami simulation in VR/AR, but the leaf spring design still is a bit too large for the software to handle, unfortunately.