{"id":809,"date":"2014-11-25T14:59:00","date_gmt":"2014-11-25T06:59:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/opentrons.com.cn\/?p=809"},"modified":"2024-04-18T15:49:11","modified_gmt":"2024-04-18T07:49:11","slug":"advancing-biology-with-an-open-source-robot","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/opentrons.com.cn\/en\/news\/advancing-biology-with-an-open-source-robot\/","title":{"rendered":"Advancing biology with open source robotics"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
Tech ambition can be gauged by the analogies founders like to throw away in interviews. The Uber of X, the Amazon of Y, it\u2019s all very impressive if this startup succeeds. But Will Canine, the organizing force behind OpenTrons, has higher goals: \"Today's biology lab automation is what computers were in the 1960s\u2014a mainframe with punch cards, run by lab technicians. We are PCs.\"<\/p>\n\n\n\n
For anyone with an exciting futuristic mindset, this will evoke all kinds of wild techno-utopian fantasies. When you see Opentrons' open source robot OT.One on Kickstarter, you think: Finally, a MakerBot made for life itself. Donate enough to the campaign (hopefully they'll actually pull it off) and you'll print glow-in-the-dark fish that smell like strawberries and instantly secrete life-saving cancer drugs.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
But what this actually means - a PC revolution in biology - is a little more complex, but also more practical. Technically speaking, OT.One is a liquid handling robot. Rather than squeezing oozing synthetic life onto a plate, it will automate the tedious work that makes up most biological research. Canine's mainframe analogy is spot on, as existing biolab robots cost around $50,000 (quickly rising into six figures) at their most basic, require weeks of training to use properly, are definitely not open source, and Usually dedicated to only one laboratory task.<\/p>\n\n\n\n