Spiggy wrote:I'm not claiming that bio-manufacturing would automatically reduce mass and supply, but nano-manufacturing might and bio-manufacturing is a sub-set of it. The reason being is that nano-fabication with an outside information source theoritally have near infinite flexibility with the low mass. The attainability of the ideal can be put in doubt, but a machine shop isn't going to make a part that is smaller its accuracy, and to have atomic levels of accuracy with low mass nano, and perhaps biological, systems are ideally superior than tradtional methods.
Do you use a tweezer to build your car? No. Things are best at working at their native scale, and nanotech is going to be just as bad at working on the large scale as a big honking factory robot is going to be ad building microchips. There is proof of this in real life - while one the microscopic scale, most reactions are fairly well organized (as chemical reactions go), on the macroscopic scale, we see that bio-manufacturing can't even make two arms within a quater-inch of each other's length. Unlesss your ship is about the size of a walnut, conventional manufacturing techniques will
always be better than bio- or nano-manufacturing methods.
Spiggy wrote:We do need neuro-net based systems to solve problems, like whether that planet has life, there raw processing power might not be sufficient in itself. Of course you can also used the same no-limits extention and claim that your 1googlo-herz computer can be programmed to do so, but the question is where biological systems would do it better as in faster and with less mass and energy consumption, is still unanswered since the limits of either is unknown and nature-produced neuro-nets can do this far better than any traditional computer today.
Yes, Neural-net based algorithims can solve
some problems faster than conventional archetecture. HOWEVER, most problems, in particular any problem that involves getting an exact solution (i.e., most problems taht a starship computer would actually be tasked to solve) are solved far faster and more efficiently by your pocket calculator than by your brain. Also, read my post again, or better yet, go to your local bookstore and pick up
The Age of Spiritual Machines: When Computers Exceed Human Intelligence. As you can plainly see, biological systems are
already being surpassed by artificial systems in just about every area. Why would you want to
limit yourself to organic computing?
Spiggy wrote:I think the possibilities are (near) limitless, but the engineering problem is going to give engineers a headache bigger than the death star.
I smell a brainbug.
Spiggy wrote:Batterys leak when not in use, and fuels degrade (at abit minisure rates) so there. Consider that sealed wine can keep some organisms alive for centuries but feeding on itself. Also, a computer can't self repair when it is shut down can it?
And a bio-organism can't self-repair when it's
dead, which is what is going to happen when you expose its internal organs to vaccum.
Spiggy wrote:So you want to terraform a planet. Do you send 1. some tailor made resistant bacteria to create greenhouse gas for warm as well as oxygen. 2. Hyundai Heavy Industries monster terra forming plant at 1 million tons.
Irrelevant. The question is: are biological systems better for performing the functions on a
starship, not are they better at terraforming. If you want to discuss the best method of terraforming a planet, then you may open a seperate thread at your convenience.
Spiggy wrote:I would agree growing a ship is a absurd idea with what we know of biology, but seed mass required to start production in a favorable environment is far less, as you don't need to move a whole industry over.
If we have a favorable environment for life, it might even be cheaper to send bio-ship growing life than a factory. (but that is a strech alright)
Concession Accepted.
Oh, and to answer your attempt at a counter-point: name one multicellular organism that does
not require an egg/womb to grow in.
Spiggy wrote:Actually, the energy required for any newtonian vessal to move at any significant speed is so huge that differences in efficiency can be discarded.
Concession Accepted.
Spiggy wrote:I'd agree that could displace organics if a sufficiently small and flexible system could be build, but we don't know if it is possible.
Yet you assume that it
is possible to build an organic system that can metabolize inorganic matter in such a way as to make the same useful materials that would be required to grow systems that are in any way comparable to inoragnic ships? You're stretching.