Hellbound Hellhound
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Apr 2, 2018
We haven't. The only difference between the computers of the 50's are the amount of transistors. The Integrated Circuit was realized in Texas Instruments in 1958. An Nvidia TsunamiForce 9000+ is just a large integrated circuit. That's it.
It's not just the amount of transistors; it's a matter of how small we can engineer them in order to fit them all together. The fact remains that we didn't have the technology 50 years ago to make the computer chips we make today, otherwise, we would have.
Also lmao at "We can't cure a disease with regular chemistry so let's gene edit it."
In many cases gene editing could be the crucial difference between managing the symptoms of a disease and curing it. After all, why work to develop drugs that manage the symptoms of a defective gene when we could instead correct it? We already know the genes responsible for genetic disorders such as muscular dystrophy, and as the technology becomes more refined (and thus safer), it's not illogical to suggest that a genetic intervention might end up being the most effective way forward.
Of course, I use gene editing as just one example. The reality is that biomedical science on the whole is becoming increasingly holistic in it's focus the more we understand about how the human body works. Take for instance the current research that is being done in the development of senolytic drugs. It has been established since the 1990s that the accumulation of senescent cells as we get older leads to a whole host of age-related pathologies, and we are now developing the means to eliminate them with a single intervention. That's a big step forward from our current one disease, one treatment paradigm.