The Venusflowerbasket, for example, a kind of deep-sea sponge, has spiny skeletal outgrowths that are remarkably similar, both in appearance and optical properties, to commercial optical fibres, notes Joanna Aizenberg, a researcher at Lucent Technology's Bell Laboratories in New Jersey.
ECONOMIST: REPORTS
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Much work is left to get the proteins producing the kind of silicon or titanium dioxides that could run a computer or power your house, but the dream is to have synthetic creations that organically produce what would normally need a mining expedition -- imagine something akin to the glass-like Venus' FlowerBasket sponge (pictured above) sitting in an Intel factory.
ENGADGET: UCSB engineers proteins that make silicon, leads hipsters to insist on organically-grown computers