DNA Hard Drives
DNA Hard Drives
DNA Hard Drives
Technology today along with various innovations and impeccable concepts of scientists,
software engineers/developers, researchers, etc. are ever-changing and evolving from time to
time. The transitions would always leave people in awe. Just recently, DNA Hard Drives are out
in public as a possible future for mass storing data. What is a DNA Hard drive, anyway? Well,
“DNA is the hard drive, the memory in every cell in every living organism that has the
instructions for how to make that cell. It’s a chemical molecule and is four different kinds of
molecules that can be stuck together in a chain, and you can put those four in any order and if
you read that back you have a sequence of characters. If you want to think of it like a digital
code” by Nick Goldman. Moreover, it is undeniably amusing given that they can last for almost
10, 000 years and are not susceptible to any technical failures. They are stable, handy, and easy
to carry, and the list goes on. The gist of this as we all know, storage media such as floppy disks,
CDs, DVDs, portable hard drives, thumb drives, and cloud storage have a finite lifespan.
Concerning this issue, over a few beers, the European Bioinformatics Institute (EBI) came up
with the idea of cramming digital information into DNA. Which is now been looked up in the
biological field as the future of storing data digitally.
In addition, what makes this concept pleasing and immaculate is that a list of movies, an
entire genetic textbook, and such can be stored in this tiny chip/disk with only small storage
covered----this is very advance that could empower and revolutionize people’s way of saving
data. Likewise, the said storage can be scaled to create storage capacity that exceeds all currently
known digital storage capacity (around 1 zettabyte). How amazing is that, right? Truly, the
power technology can hold with the right methods from researchers, scientists, biologists, etc.
All of the data in a large data center could be stored in a few grams of DNA,
consequently, the technology is still too expensive to implement. However, in the long run, this
could be useful for long-distance space travel. People on a ship require entertainment to keep
their spirits up. In a very small and light package, this device can store thousands of terabytes of
information, data, contents, and so on. It's an excellent solution to the problem of creating a long-
term digital archive. Because of the devised experiment to see if DNA was a good way to store
information, these excellent concepts arise and lit up the hope of biologists to help people store
data in bigger pictures.
To wrap this baby up, the DNA Hard drive can be great storage for people in a long run
without worrying about how to take care of it. “Life on earth has used DNA as its hard disc drive
for hundreds of millions of years, so maybe we could use it too.” Nick Goldman---one of the
brains of this groundbreaking discovery. Indeed, it could be the future of digital storage.
Impeccable!