Technology has immortality, cures for the worlds devastating diseases, quantum computing and a host of other science fiction notions in its grasp. Current trends in a number of areas indicate that over the next 10 years many of these technologies will come to fruition. "The Next 10 Years" tracks the trends that will transform our everyday lives in almost unimaginable ways.

Thursday, April 13, 2006

New Scientist Tech - News - Print me a heart and a set of arteries: "SITTING in a culture dish, a layer of chicken heart cells beats in synchrony. But this muscle layer was not sliced from an intact heart, nor even grown laboriously in the lab. Instead, it was 'printed', using a technology that could be the future of tissue engineering.

Gabor Forgacs, a biophysicist at the University of Missouri in Columbia, described his 'bioprinting' technique last week at the Experimental Biology 2006 meeting in San Francisco. It relies on droplets of 'bioink', clumps of cells a few hundred micrometres in diameter, which Forgacs has found behave just like a liquid."

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