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Only tangentially related:

Does anyone know if any labs are attempting to produce new antibiotics by exposing antibiotic resistant bacteria to fungi, or other bacteria?

I know there's a lot of research into using phages as an antibiotic.
True, yes, I’m aware of that to some extent.

I’m thinking along the lines of putting natural selection against itself.

Yes this process is called "drug discovery"/"development" and more specifically "drug screening". Typically new antibiotics are developed vs resistant bacteria because that's clinically relevant.

"In the pipeline" blog https://blogs.sciencemag.org is a really good intro to the field

The “in the pipeline” blog also contains the “things I won’t work with” section (https://blogs.sciencemag.org/pipeline/archives/category/thin...) which is one of the most awesome reads ever, at least for people with some practical experience of an organic chemistry lab.
Working as a chemist for a while, one tends to develop an explosion sense. Because it is never your stuff blowing up, but rather the postdoc behind you dumped his peroxide waste into the organic waste bottle or whatever and you're not looking at it.

There's a bunch of very subtle hisses,"stretches", gentle little clinks, "gas expansion into a closed container" that all seem to indicate an explosion is in progress.

Personally, I will pre-consciously teleport out the room when this happens. After leaving the field for more lucrative sofware stuff, it has embarrassed me a few times and saved my skin a few times (shoddy LP cylinder igniting, low pressure plastics getting attached to a soda stream carbonator etc)

So...in the future, when we can harness bacteria for our mobile/fuel cells, will we simply call these devices BACtteries?

(You see what i did there? And, yes, I'm a father, so am compelled to pump out silly jokes. ;-)