The tiny molecule responsible for transmitting the genetic data for every living thing on earth could be the answer to the IT industry?EU?s quest for a more compact storage medium. In fact, researchers from Microsoft and the University of Washington recently succeeded in storing 200 MB of data on a few strands of DNA, occupying a small dot on a test tube many times smaller than the tip of a pencil.
Despite the small space occupied by the DNA strands, the researchers were nonetheless able to successfully store and retrieve high-definition digital video, the top 100 books from Project Guttenberg, and copies of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in more than 100 languages.
?EU?Think of the amount of data in a big data center compressed into a few sugar cubes,?EU? Microsoft wrote in a blog post announcing the achievement. ?EU?Or all the publicly accessible data on the Internet slipped into a shoebox.?EU? That is the promise DNA data storage represents, according to Microsoft. At least, once the scientists are able to overcome a few important roadblocks and scale the technology up.
?EU?DNA is an amazing information storage molecule that encodes data about how a living system works,?EU? said Luis Henrique Ceze, a UW associate professor of computer science and engineering and the university?EU?s principal researcher on the project. ?EU?This is one important example of the potential of borrowing from nature to build better computer systems.?EU?
DNA has several advantages as a...