Nature can improve our computers

Dennis Shasha, a professor of computer science believes the next great leap in computing will be programming machines to behave in almost evolutionary ways writes CASPAR LLEWELLYN SMITH

Robots on Mars that can fix themselves and computers built from DNA: not science fiction but the work of scientists at the forefront of computing.

Dennis Shasha, 55, is a professor of computer science at New York University's Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences and the author, with Cathy Lazere, of Natural Computing: DNA, Quantum Bits and the Future of Smart Machines (Norton), a survey of research in fields as disparate as engineering and medicine. This New Yorker sees an emerging common theme: that the future of computing lies in a synthesis with nature.

Editor's Comment
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