But it does show a pathway by which laymen might improve biostatis
No, it doesn't. Again, we aren't brine shrimp eggs.
For that matter, Geekhere is another layman with another potentially useful idea: use some sort of electromagnetic effect to interfere with ice crystal formation, presumably until we reach the vitrification temperature of water, at which water is an amorphous solid like window glass. Perhaps nuclear magnetic resonance or heavy water might be of assistance, for that matter.
Or perhaps we can pray to Osiris and he can preserve us for all eternity. An unfounded idea is not useful at all.
Clearly, less than 1% of the scientists in this world are cryonics experts. I would bet that the remaining 99% could combine their ingenuity in novel ways to come up with a solution to the problem sooner.
I would bet that no. And, anyway, the people writing ideas here aren't scientists (at least, not in the relevant fields, like chemistry, physiology, cryogenics or medicine) and have no experience at all on cryonics or estasis.
If you want to improve some engineering or scientific field, first of all, study and become an expert in the relevant fields. A half-baked idea helps no one.
Edited by Antonio2014, 25 December 2015 - 09:48 PM.