Genetics Concepts Long-term Thinking The Big Here Digital Dark Age Organizational Continuity Futures Millennial Precedent Archives Long Shorts Long News Projects Announcements Long Now Talks The Clock of the Long Now The Rosetta Project The Interval Long Bets Revive & Restore PanLex Manual For Civilization Disciplines Art Business Cities Civilization Climate Change Computing Culture Economics Energy Environment Evolution Genetics Globalization Government History Infrastructure Language Psychology Science Science Fiction Space Technology Year 02022 02021 02020 02019 02018 02017 02016 02015 02014 02013 02012 02011 02010 02009 02008 02007 02006 02005 02004 OLDER Environment To Save It, Eat It Why gene banks aren’t enough to save the world’s food By Taras Grescoe Genetics How DNA is Helping Black Brazilians Uncover Their Roots A new genetics study sheds light on the deep legacy of colonization on the people of Brazil By Raphael Tsavkko Long Now Talks Ryan Phelan Bringing Biotech to Wildlife Conservation Futures Conceiving the Future of Reproductive Technology In-Vitro Fertilization has gone from science fiction to a reality. Now, new technologies are offering some the genetic engineering tools to more deeply control our reproductive future. But are these reproductive technologies saviors, threats, or something in between? By Laura Jayne Evolution E. coli in the Long View E. coli has been with us for untold generations — more of theirs than ours, to be sure — and we have evolved together in both commensal and adversarial ways. By Jacob Kuppermann Evolution The History of Hybrid Species from Kungas to Killer Bees Humans have long been fascinated with hybrid animal breeds as both friends and foes. By Jacob Kuppermann Revive & Restore Revive & Restore announces New Program in Biotechnology for Bird Conservation Saving endangered bird species requires specialized biotechnological tools to crack the problem of the Avian yolk. By Jacob Kuppermann Civilization A Global History of Trade, As Told Through Peppers 10,000 pepper genomes tell a story about the history of global trade. By Jacob Kuppermann Culture Podcast: The Future of Breathing | James Nestor By The Long Now Foundation Futures The Neobiological Frontier: An Interview with Jane Metcalfe, Founder and CEO of NEO.LIFE We talk to WIred co-founder Jane Metcalfe about the future of our species and the merging of biology and technology. By The Long Now Foundation
Environment To Save It, Eat It Why gene banks aren’t enough to save the world’s food By Taras Grescoe
Genetics How DNA is Helping Black Brazilians Uncover Their Roots A new genetics study sheds light on the deep legacy of colonization on the people of Brazil By Raphael Tsavkko
Futures Conceiving the Future of Reproductive Technology In-Vitro Fertilization has gone from science fiction to a reality. Now, new technologies are offering some the genetic engineering tools to more deeply control our reproductive future. But are these reproductive technologies saviors, threats, or something in between? By Laura Jayne
Evolution E. coli in the Long View E. coli has been with us for untold generations — more of theirs than ours, to be sure — and we have evolved together in both commensal and adversarial ways. By Jacob Kuppermann
Evolution The History of Hybrid Species from Kungas to Killer Bees Humans have long been fascinated with hybrid animal breeds as both friends and foes. By Jacob Kuppermann
Revive & Restore Revive & Restore announces New Program in Biotechnology for Bird Conservation Saving endangered bird species requires specialized biotechnological tools to crack the problem of the Avian yolk. By Jacob Kuppermann
Civilization A Global History of Trade, As Told Through Peppers 10,000 pepper genomes tell a story about the history of global trade. By Jacob Kuppermann
Futures The Neobiological Frontier: An Interview with Jane Metcalfe, Founder and CEO of NEO.LIFE We talk to WIred co-founder Jane Metcalfe about the future of our species and the merging of biology and technology. By The Long Now Foundation