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COULD THE MOLECULE KNOWN FOR STORING GENETIC INFORMATION ALSO STORE THE WORLD'S DATA?
by
Extance, Andy
in
Deoxyribonucleic acid
/ Digital archives
/ DNA
/ Genomes
/ Information storage
/ Semiconductors
2016
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COULD THE MOLECULE KNOWN FOR STORING GENETIC INFORMATION ALSO STORE THE WORLD'S DATA?
by
Extance, Andy
in
Deoxyribonucleic acid
/ Digital archives
/ DNA
/ Genomes
/ Information storage
/ Semiconductors
2016
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COULD THE MOLECULE KNOWN FOR STORING GENETIC INFORMATION ALSO STORE THE WORLD'S DATA?
Journal Article
COULD THE MOLECULE KNOWN FOR STORING GENETIC INFORMATION ALSO STORE THE WORLD'S DATA?
2016
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Overview
For Nick Goldman, the idea of encoding data in DNA started out as a joke. It was Wednesday 16 February 2011, and Goldman was at a hotel in Hamburg, Germany, talking with some of his fellow bioinformaticists about how they could afford to store the reams of genome sequences and other data the world was throwing at them. He remembers the scientists getting so frustrated by the expense and limitations of conventional computing technology that they started kidding about sci-fi alternatives. \"We thought, 'What's to stop us using DNA to store information?'\"
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Subject
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