Running 'Doom' on E. coli cells slowly
2 hours ago
- #biotechnology
- #coding
- #Doom
- Doom, released over 30 years ago, is a seminal first-person shooter that inspired creative coding projects since its source code became freely available in 1997.
- Hobbyists have hacked various devices like pregnancy tests, tractors, ATMs, and calculators to run Doom, pushing the limits of what can host the game.
- MIT biotechnology researcher Lauren "Ren" Ramlan engineered E. coli cells to function as a display screen for Doom, using them as pixels that glow when illuminated.
- The bacterial display works by growing cells in a 32×48 grid and controlling their fluorescence with a repressor system, translating binary code into light patterns.
- Despite being functional, the E. coli screen is extremely slow, taking about 70 minutes to illuminate a single frame and over 8 hours to dim, resulting in an estimated 599 years to play the entire game.