Linux Cluster Supercomputer Performs Surgery on Dog 68
An anonymous reader writes "In April, the Lonestar supercomputer, a Dell Linux Cluster with 5,840 processors at the Texas Advanced Computing Center in Austin, performed laser surgery on a dog in Houston without the intervention of a surgeon. The article describes the process: 'The treatment itself is broken into four stages: 1) Lonestar instructs the laser to heat the domain with a non-damaging calibration pulse; 2) the thermal MRI acquires baseline images of the heating and cooling of the patient's tissue for model calibration; 3) Lonestar inputs this patient-specific information and recomputes the optimal power profile for the rest of the treatments; and 4) surgery begins, with remote visualizations and evolving predictions continuing throughout the procedure.'"
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Free software is the right tool for the job. (Score:2, Insightful)
Prostate cancer is the target of the research, so your comment is closer to reality than you might like.
In this case, free software was the right tool. HPC with GNU/Linux is both flexible and mature. MD Anderson and everyone has better ways to spend their money than on software licenses for 5,000+ computers required to do this kind of work. Every kind of task will go this way eventually and most are already there. Whenever you start a task, you should look to see if some free program does not already d
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I'd rather have cancer cured than agendas furthered.
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The sticker price is minuscule compared to salaries etc. but there are a lot of other costs to licensed software. Like having to keep track of license keys and certificates, having to deal with various license management dane bramage, having licensing prevent quickly getting a service back up quickly and efficiently, etc.
If you consider all the licensing problems and the extra hoops to be jumped through over the life of a server, the up-front cost of the license is really just the beginning.
The BIG adva
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"I exist to cut flesh...
PC LOAD LETTER...
PC LOAD LETTER!"
"Nooo!"
New Robot Overlords (Score:4, Funny)
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The dog died. (Score:5, Informative)
If it is the intended outcome... well, so be it. If not, OTOH, that makes me a little less likely to sign up to be an early human test subject.
Re:The dog died. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:The dog died. (Score:5, Funny)
Bad analogy (Score:3, Funny)
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A more likely interpretation is that the surgery was completed and that the dog was killed and dissected to determine if the surgery was a success. That is what normally happens during animal trials.
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Re:The dog died. (Score:4, Funny)
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Re:The dog died. (Score:5, Funny)
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1) Do the basic science
2) Ask your IRB for approval
3) Experiment on dogs
4) Ask your IRB for approval
5) Experiment on people
6) Use evidence to demonstrate that your procedure works
7) Procedure becomes mainstream
In case you were actually wondering, and not just making a roundabout point in opposition to animal research.
And they killed the dog.... (Score:1, Insightful)
Maybe next time the researchers should try it...damn vivisectionists.
Awesome (Score:5, Insightful)
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In some cases, they already are by allowing doctor's assistants and nurses' assistants the same powers. But I won't really consider it a success until I can go down the street and have eye surgery in Boris's basement, right next to where he makes the bootleg vodka.
Re:Awesome (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Awesome (Score:5, Informative)
However your description of surgery is not correct. Surgery is difficult, minutious and different for ever patient. Great surgeons must be able to plan ahead, direct a team and control all the details of a surgery procedure as it happens, as well as improvising with a cool head for hours on end if things go wrong.
It's the exact opposite of rote procedure. Especially now with recent advances in real-time non-invasive imaging and haptic instruments procedures change all the time.
Planning the surgery (Score:3, Insightful)
When you can replace a decade of training a person with a simple file copy to load software on to a robot, think of the savings that represents.
And who is going to plan the surgery ?
A doctor who has gone medical training is still required. The only thing is after a long intellectually preparation part (reflection, selecting the route, specifying the region, everything else that needs to be planned by someone with lots of experience), the doctor can give the instruction to the robot and move to the next case.
The price are going to go down. Not because you'll get rid of the doctors, but because the "planning" doctors we'll be able to handle more cas
Here the *-scopy procedure did it already. (Score:2)
Thus, for me, the introduction of robots, both classical surgical and new autonomous one, doesn't translate into shorter hospitalisation times. The procedure that our new overlords are going to replace where already minimally invasive in the
Yellow Dog Linux? (Score:1)
Yellow Dog Linux [terrasoftsolutions.com] distro home page.
Autodoc? (Score:3, Interesting)
Of more immediate use, this sort of thing could be very useful for situations where surgeons are not available. Ships at sea, trips to Mars, NHS hospitals with long waiting lists...
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It's not a Beowulf Cluster (Score:3, Funny)
Always mount a scratch monkey! (Score:1)
"Surgery" is a bit misleading (Score:2)
If you want to consider what it does surgery then you really should include radiotherapy treatments that have been computer controlled for years.
So, how many (Score:1)
The "New You"... (Score:1)