I'm here because I believe in the future even moreso because some people that know a whole lot more about than me says the technology works as they've described and can do a whole lot more as they figure it out. 👍
it would be beautiful if your clown show management hadn't set investors money on fire (and insiders are still cashing out of this burning piece of shit)
A lot more people would be interested in biology if the intro tools weren't stinky slime in bottles with invisible mechanisms requiring months or years of theory to understand.
Insiders are STILL dumping shares as this stock plummets to new lows. Jason Kelly is an incompetent snake oil salesman. What a piece of sh*t this company is.
Artificial Intelligence doesn't answer how chaga mushrooms compare to man made materials in terms of weight and strength etc. Perhaps Ginkgo Bioworks can apply civil engineering strength of materials tests to chaga mushrooms. The other biological aspect is how chaga mushrooms can be so hard and light and the collateral question whether they're primeval bones or the origin of manmal bones. The obvious market is augmenting bones in seniors and addressing osteoporosis. Related question is how stomach fascia can be bone like or muscle like. The bioengineering is to translate powdered chaga in the gut into bone or fascia in the musculoskeletal system. So, microbes to do the job. The whole family of mushrooms hard as wood or bone, may be helpful. Jhoon Rhee and "The Longevity Paradox...", by Gundry suggest seniors may have frail bones or youthful bones. Go Ginkgo go!
I was confused why this got recommended to me, do not know half of terms thats in this vid. Clicked because i thought it was DnD video, stayed for great visual and narrator. Still confuzed but intrigued.
Modalis's approach is based on specific DNA sequence. Ginkgo is the company doing DNA analysis by using AI, recently announced the collaboration with Google. Usefull "DNA platform" and the connection with Ginkgo's other collaborator may acceralate Modalis's growth,,,maybe.
@@thomasmiskiewicz531 I understand. Actually they are on development stage, and Modalis too. No significant outcome has come both from them yet. So the partnership may not be meaningful, or something interesting perhaps.
@@user-eg5sk8yf2z Every company goes through a development stage. That's not a problem. The issue arises when they sold shares at $15 each, but it has now emerged that they lack profitable assets. Consequently, their share price has plummeted to $0.50 and continues to fall. I think the problem is that they have too many scientists and no businesspeople on their team. I feel their CEO, Kelly, still thinks he's running a research facility rather than a business.
Your company is a joke. You've turned it in to a penny stock and your scam artist CEO has Theranos vibes all over him and management continue to cash out stock every week. I'd suggest you try and work out how to make money as otherwise there will be pitch forks at your door. No one gives a shit about your bogus pseudo science any more... this company is just bleeding cash and no path to profitability
This might be worth 300 million after you fearmonger for a decent government contract, but foundry is worth 0. The fact that this went public at 20 billion and the only thing Ginkgo has is a suction device for airport wastewater is hilariously sad. The picture of the dashboard is just a mockup of it, they can't even program a dashboard LOL! This is a 16 year old company btw.
Came here to see Wintermute reenact the Ballmer developer chant complete with pletes and pits. Stayed to hear about Sumitomo zaibatsu in the post modern, post industrial era. Wintermute plus zaibatsu plus sci fi tech = cyberpunk vibegasm.
In Object Oriented Programming, they have what are known as "hives. I wonder if this science has similar libraries full of subroutines that are universal based on class and if so, how fast these "hives" are growing in number as well as interoperability.
I have a B.S. in Computer Science and am about to finish a B.S. in Biology, I've performed well as a student and many of my professors have encouraged me to take my education further. This is exactly the sort of thing I want to do, but I don't know the way forward. I'm the first person in my family to go to college, I don't have a ton of highly educated friends, and most of my professors got their PhD's before the internet was a thing, much less synthetic biology. How do I learn more about this, like actual careers and not just broad fields of study. How do I find schools that offer programs and degrees for this?