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Shock and awe

Posted under Technology

Once stories of grey goo become replaced with lighter tennis racquets, we'll stop worrying about Nanotechnology, says Joyce Fortune. She's responding to the fourth of Lord Broers' Reith Lectures.

27 Apr
2005

The laptop I am using to prepare this response is many times smaller than the machine I used as a student to just punch the cards that were fed into the University’s mainframe computer.

And it took a stack of punched cards a few inches high to perform an essentially trivial task such as calculating the mean and standard deviation of a list of numbers.

(Okay, so perhaps this is an essentially trivial task too, but I’m sure you get the point!)

Punched card [Image: Adrian DeeJay under CC-BY-NC-SA licence] Creative Commons Image AdrianDeeJay via Flickr
Punched card [Image: Adrian DeeJay under CC-BY-NC-SA licence]

The transformation from what we had then to what we have now is truly amazing.

It has changed our lives in very many ways. But when technological developments are reported in the popular press the actual achievements never seem to be quite awe-inspiring enough for either the reporters or the readers.

There has to be some fantastical element. We need shock as well as awe. In the case of nanotechnology the shock element was provided by the ‘grey goo’.

This was a threat that held sway for some time, raising the profile of nanotechnology and keeping it in the headlines. For the last few months, however, the press has only mentioned ‘grey goo’ in order to dismiss it as ‘a scare story’, a ‘science fiction tale’ or a ‘doomsday fantasy’.

I suspect the term nanotechnology will not continue to excite anything like the same popular interest whilst the developments are being reported are fuel additives, stronger and lighter tennis rackets, a more effective form of sunscreen; and the like.

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Article Information

Publication details
Tuesday, 26th April 2005
Wednesday, 27th April 2005

Copyright information
• Body text - Copyrighted: The Open University
• Image 'Punched card [Image: Adrian DeeJay under CC-BY-NC-SA licence]' - Creative-Commons: AdrianDeeJay via Flickr

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