(“nano-” means “one billionth of”)
http://lesswrong.com/lw/fk/survey_results/
IQs (warning: self-reported numbers for notoriously hard-to-measure statistic) ranged from 120 to 180. The mean was 145.88, median was 141.50, and SD was 14.02. Quartiles were 155.
(“nano-” means “one billionth of”, so a nanometer is one billionth the size of a meter).
allow us to intelligently access cancer cells and blood cells.
I don't know what this means.
This would be an explosive technology
I can't think of a better word than "explosive", but we should try.
IQs [...] ranged from 120 to 180.
I think this FAQ is intended for a general audience.
I invite your feedback on this snippet from the forthcoming Friendly AI FAQ. This one is an answer to the question "What is nanotechnology?" For references, see here.
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Nanotechnology is the study of materials and devices built at the scale of 1-100 nanometers (“nano-” means “one billionth of”). A hydrogen atom is about 0.24nm across, so we’re talking about materials and devices built atom by atom.
One famous piece of nanotechnology is the carbon nanotube. A carbon nanotube is a one-atom-thick sheet of graphite that is rolled into a seamless tube. Because of their physical properties, carbon nanotubes usually allow ballistic conduction, meaning that electrons can flow through the tube without collisions (Lin & Shung 1995), which allows the carbon nanotubes to conduct electricity without heat dissipation (Chico et al. 1996)! Carbon nanotubes are also much stronger than diamond or steel (Popov et al. 2002). Easton Bell Sports uses carbon nanotubes to build tougher bicycles, doctors use carbon nanotubes as scaffolding for bone growth in tissue engineering applications (Zanello et al. 2006), and one company uses carbon nanotubes to produce a special kind of high-conductance heater.
New nanomaterials are being developed every year, and may see applications in nearly every field of technology (Allhoff et al. 2010). Nanotechnology has already given us stain-free pants, larger-capacity hard drives, stronger cement, longer-lasting tennis balls, the world’s first sale of a quantum computer, a new method for fighting cancer, and much more.
An even more radical technology was described in Eric Drexler’s (1987) Engines of Creation. As Allhoff et al. (2010, p. 7) explain, Drexler predicted
Tiny molecular machines called “nanobots” would be a particularly revolutionary invention. For example in nanomedicine they would allow us to intelligently access cancer cells and blood cells.
It may also be possible to build self-replicating nanobots. These nanobots would use materials in their environment to manufacture copies of themselves. This would be an explosive technology, as Drexler (1987, p. 58) explains:
But the massive production of nanobots does not require that they be self-replicating. They could also be produced by nanofactories (Phoenix 2005).
Access to (or invention of) advanced molecular manufacturing is one thing that could make a machine superintelligence incredibly powerful.