the authors note that their epi-bits stayed stable at temperatures of up to 95o° C.
It's a typo. The paper states 95°C. DNA denatures at 100°C.That's either some seriously temperature-resistant organic chemistry, or there's an 'o' where there shouldn't be one.
AND it already has C, A, and T!All of those cat videos have to be stored somewhere, and DNA is a great storage medium; it has amazing data density and is stable over millennia.
Out of curiosity, will your cat violate copyright law by having kittens? The fact that the videos are stored in epigenetic data suggests that reproduction won't be a DCMA violation, but it would be good to have a biologist-lawyer confirm that hunch.Someday I will store my cat videos in my cat. Some new cheekpads might be cool.
Boiling point of water at 1 atmosphere for the F users.It's a typo. The paper states 95°C. DNA denatures at 100°C.
DNA tends to be referred to as write-once, read-never. More accurate would probably be "read rarely". It is anticipated that the best use-case for such storage would be as backup to more traditional "live" media and/or for stuff with a high-likelihood will simply never need to be accessed again.Brings a whole new meaning to Genetic Algorithms...
.... I'll see myself out.
But in all seriousness, the fact that we're still working on this tech is neat. Because for large datasets, it's important that we continue to develop more data-dense storage media. The thing that the article doesn't get into, that I'd like to know, what's the read/write speed look like for this? The how is there, and the fact that the reliability is still... a way's off, but is this one of those slower WORM(write-once-read-many)-type situations?
Gee!AND it already has C, A, and T!
We know about Celsius, thanks.Boiling point of water at 1 atmosphere for the F users.
Where ever did you get that idea from? The temperature is dependent mostly on the sequence, conformation, and ion concentration. Also, only the hardiest of DNA sequences (certain telomeric-like sequences) manage to denature at approx 95C. The temperature in the paper is not the denaturing temperature. They need to denature the DNA to read it back, ie. get the single strands through the pores.It's a typo. The paper states 95°C. DNA denatures at 100°C.
Tbh i hadn't realised dna was stable as anything like those temperatures. Way to go, dna!It's a typo. The paper states 95°C. DNA denatures at 100°C.
This is about storage. You need neurons to run Doom. Like thisCan I get Doom running on it?
DNA does have proven scalability, of course. Even humans have a very affordable steady state sequence/watt ratio and net throughput.Great. Now just improve the read/write speeds & cost per bit about a billion fold & they’ll be laughing. Instead of me.
Well spotted !Embarrassing to use a graphic of left handed DNA for a story that is about DNA. Some of us just can't un-see it
I'm sure everyone here in the Ars comment section either LOLed or smacked their forehead.But once these and a few other problems are solved
Information is more useful than snark, and the obvious isn't obvious to everyone.We know about Celsius, thanks.
I have a theory that left handed DNA graphics generate comments about their left handedness, and this boosts their weight in AI training sets. If true, pretty soon, all AI generated DNA graphics will be left handed.Well spotted !