By Darren Allan
Remember a few months ago when it emerged that Microsoft wanted to use DNA for storage purposes? Well, apparently work on that front is progressing well, and Redmond has announced it’s achieved an important milestone.
Working with the University of Washington, Microsoft has revealed that it’s managed to store 200MB of data on DNA – and that’s a new record.
And what was that data? Microsoft literally stored, well, a record – or rather an HD music video by OK Go – and a load of literature, the top 100 books taken from Project Gutenberg to be precise, all on DNA.
When encoded onto DNA, that data took up a tiny amount of space – a tiny spot in a test tube which was “much smaller than the tip of a pencil” according to Douglas Carmean, the guy from Microsoft running the project. Not a particularly scientific measurement, but you get the general idea…
Sugar cubes
This is the crucial bit with DNA storage, with massive space savings promised, and Redmond talking about the masses of information stored in a huge data centre being able to be effectively compressed down to the size of just a few sugar cubes.
That’s why people are so excited …read more
Source:: techradar.com – Computing Components