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        Must-see video on nature's nanotechnology

        [UPDATE: Welcome, Instapundit readers. If you like to get nano news, free subscription to our e-newsletter is at the right, part way down, on this blog’s home page.]
        From scientific animation company XVIVO in collaboration with Harvard comes an 8-minute video showing nature’s nanotechnology: molecular machinery of the cell, in action:

        Nuclei, proteins and lipids move with bug-like authority, slithering, gliding and twisting through 3D space. โ€œAll of those things that you see in the animation are going on in every one of your cells in your body all the time,โ€ says XVIVO lead animator John Liebler

        “…in the animation thereโ€™s a motor protein thatโ€™s sort of walking along a line, carrying this round sphere of lipids. When I started working on that section I admit I was kind of surprised to see that it really does look like itโ€™s out for a stroll, like a character in a science fiction film or animation. But based on all the data, itโ€™s a completely accurate rendering.โ€

        It’s a preview of the nanotech of the future, and it looks like science fiction. No surprise there.

        As you watch, keep in mind two points: in reality, (1) these structures are also engaging in a lot more random motion, and (2) they are packed closer together. But showing those features would make it hard for us to understand what is happening.

        Here’s a version I’d like to see: the addition of labels and โ€” while the music is lovely โ€” an audio explanation of what we’re seeing.

        But the current version is great too. (Source: CRN) โ€”Christine

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