By Darren Allan
When it comes to storage, there are many different mediums, but Microsoft has taken a bold step on this front with plans to store data in DNA.
That doesn’t mean we are about to see hard drives or SSDs inside our PCs get replaced by lumps of ‘meat’, because these are just the very first steps Redmond is taking, and the goal here is long-term storage and archiving.
Microsoft has purchased ten million strands of DNA (long oligonucleotides) from Twist Bioscience, and as a medium it has the potential to far outlast current long-term storage media – DNA has a shelf life of up to two thousand years according to some recent research.
Twist can write data to strings of DNA, although the downside for the customer is reading the data which as Ars Technica reports is a far clunkier process than with typical storage media, requiring genetic sequencing to be undertaken.
While that used to be prohibitively expensive, the costs have now dropped massively, and Emily Leproust, CEO of Twist, notes that they are “continuously decreasing”.
Leproust commented: “Our silicon-based DNA synthesis platform offers unmatched scale and product quality that vastly accelerates the ability to write DNA at a cost enabling …read more
Source:: techradar.com – Computing Components