Laying hands on the supplies for most hacks we cover is getting easier by the day. A few pecks at the keyboard and half a dozen boards or chips are on an ePacket from China to your doorstep for next to nothing. But if hacking life is what you’re into, you’ll spend a lot of time and money gathering the necessary instrumentation. Unless you roll your own mini genetic engineering lab from scratch, that is.
Taking the form of an Arduino mega-shield that supports a pH meter, a spectrophotometer, and a PID-controlled hot plate, [M. Bindhammer]’s design has a nice cross-section of the instruments needed to start biohacking in your basement. Since the shield piggybacks on an Arduino, all the data can be logged, and decisions can be made based on the data as it is collected. One example is changing the temperature of the hot plate when a certain pH is reached. Not having to babysit your experiments could be a huge boon to the basement biohacker.
Biohacking is poised to be the next big thing in the hacking movement, and [M. Bindhammer]’s design is far from the only player in the space. From incubators to peristaltic pumps to complete labs in a box, the tools to tweak life are starting to reach critical mass. We can’t wait to see where these tools lead.
What is the name of the shield? What is the link to the website?
The first link in the post is to the Hackaday.io page for this project. The author has schematics and PCB layouts there.
Omg… Please stop calling RGB leds and light sensors spectrophotometers.
Please stop to submit unqualified comments like this
Still need efficient and cheap oligosynthesis. You have cat/echo but no vi/emacs because you can’t edit DNA strands with arbitrary changes. Right now, you fix the DNA to tiny bowling balls–from their point of view–and add one broken nucleotide at a time, ‘fix’ the broken nucleotide, then add a new one. Its massively expensive from the standpoint of reagents.