MIT Scientists Create Virus-Based Battery

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This kind of tinkering has been going on in other fields for years with MUCH more relevant organisms (mice) than bacterium. Honestly, this is REALLY cool, although I understand why some of you sound a tad nervous. I too, hate running, and hope the zombies are of the slow variety. But having UBER cool batteries in my laptop in a few years also sounds amazing. Now all we need to do is start upgrading the power grid to be able to handle a society run on batteries, instead of our current gasoline driven one...
 
[citation][nom]norbs[/nom]Yea this does make me feel a bit uneasy. I'm sure they take precautions but it's just seems like a matter of time before someone makes something that they wish they hadn't.[/citation]

"According to project leader Angela Belcher, the virus used in the battery is a common bacteriophage, which infects bacteria but is harmless to humans."

No need to be uneasy.
 
...what if the viruses get minds of their own and decide to build robots? Then what, Mr. Genius Scientist? /sarcasm

While this is fascinating news, I do think it would be better if they developed virus-free batteries... unless of course this battery is cleaner than anything else.
 
I think we're going to see a lot more of that bio-research in the future!
Perhaps we are all going to be living green!
TV not working? Feed some bacteria to it,or hang it on a solar panel!
 
I always thought they would do this with bacteria or multi cell organisms heck maybe single cell. But never in my mind would i think a virus would be used.
 
What bothers me is if this becomes commonplace to have batteries made out of virus, you might have some anarchist that figures out how to modify the virus & make it deadly. You would then see terrorists buying up batteries much like the meth lab people buy up cold medicine.
 
Not a new idea by any stretch of imagination, using genetically modified viri for beneficial effects has been in science fiction for years.

[citation][nom]Pongobongo[/nom]Imagine if this virus could be made to self-replicate. Talk about easy mass-production![/citation]
see this
[citation][nom]Pei-chen[/nom]What if the virus mutates and changes the voltage or leaked?[/citation]
Letting them reproduce unattended pretty much invites a mutation. I'd guess they'd be shipped in a sterile state.
 
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