Synthetic DNA-Making SSD's obsolete.

FalseChristian

Diamond Member
Jan 7, 2002
3,322
0
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The Storage Capacity of DNA

COMPUTER users generate enormous amounts of digital data that has to be stored for access as needed. Scientists are hoping to revolutionize current methods for digital storage by imitating a far superior data-storage system found in nature—DNA.

Consider: DNA, found in living cells, holds billions of pieces of biological information. “We can extract it from bones of woolly mammoths . . . and make sense of it,” says Nick Goldman of the European Bioinformatics Institute. “It’s also incredibly small, dense and does not need any power for storage, so shipping and keeping it is easy.” Could DNA store man-made data? Researchers say yes.

Scientists have synthesized DNA with encoded text, images, and audio files, much as digital media stores data. The researchers were later able to decode the stored information with 100 percent accuracy. Scientists believe that in time, using this method, 0.04 ounce (1 g) of artificial DNA could store the data of some 3,000,000 CDs and that all this information could be preserved for hundreds if not thousands of years. Potentially, this system could store the whole world’s digital archive. DNA has thus been dubbed “the ultimate hard drive.”

Just 1 gram can hold over 2,100,000,000,000,000 bytes (2.1 Quadrillion) of information.
 

ronbo613

Golden Member
Jan 9, 2010
1,237
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After a few test tubes of synthetic DNA take over the world, it won't matter if it replaces SSD's or not.
 

LoveMachine

Senior member
May 8, 2012
491
3
81
But what sort of IOPS can you get? Indexing, finding, reading, converting to digital so the rest of the "computer" can make use of the info - At molecular scale using any current biochemical technology, using DNA instead of NAND would be orders of magnitude slower for anything beyond archiving. I think SSDs are a safe bet for the foreseeable future. DNA is only stable when folded and coiled up and wrapped around supporting proteins. To be readable using any sort of electromagnetic reader, the DNA needs to be unfolded then repackaged. Transcribing via biological methods using mRNA/tRNA would be even slower.
 
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MongGrel

Lifer
Dec 3, 2013
38,466
3,067
121
Biological computers have been an old sci fi theory for a long time now, it's not that surprising but hadn't followed if it had been developed I guess personally.

Instead of water cooling systems maybe we'll be adding Nutrient systems in the future, he he.

"Hmm lets see, what do I feed my computer today, she didn't like the tuna flavor the other day".
 
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