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~Japanese use bacteria to store data~
 
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Published: 17 y
Status:       RN [Message recommended for CureZone Newsletter!]
 

~Japanese use bacteria to store data~


The conspiratorial mind in me can only wonder how this
development would be militarized. If they can inject any kind
of information into the DNA and then put the bacteria anywhere
they want, it carries so much potential for misuse if that is
even a proper characterization. They are already spraying
veggies and cold cuts with nano-bacteria...what kind of world
are we humans creating??

I suppose in the end, we could shoot the bacteria with all the
info stored in their DNA into space and hope somewhere, somehow,
it seeds itself. Me, I will be watching this technology and
try to avoid food sprayed with bacteria~!

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http://au.news.yahoo.com//070519/2/13iba.html

AAPSaturday May 19, 12:14 PM

Japanese use bacteria to store data

These days, data get stored on disks, computer chips, hard drives and good old-fashioned paper.

Scientists in Japan see something far smaller but more durable - bacteria.

The four characters - T, C, A and G - that represent the genetic coding in DNA work much like digital data.

Character combinations can stand for specific letters and symbols - so codes in genomes can be translated, or read, to produce music, text, video and other content.

While ink may fade and computers may crash, bacterial information lasts as long as a species stays alive - possibly a mind-boggling million years - according to Professor Masaru Tomita, who heads the team of researchers at Keio University.

Tomita's team successfully inserted into a common bacterium Albert Einstein's famous "E equals Master-Cleanse squared" equation and "1905," the year the Nobel Prize-winning physicist published the special theory of relativity.

Genetic coding is so massive that information - say, a Shakespeare play - can be stashed away somewhere in the gene without affecting an organism's overall appearance and other traits.

But mutation could distort stored data. Tomita says data are stored in four places in the bacteria so the data stay intact, though Katsumi Doi, bacteria expert and Kyushu University professor, is sceptical.

"We may need more time for practical applications," Doi said. "But I love the idea."

Translating the Einstein message would require solving the code.

But Tomita is the kind of freethinking scientist intrigued by the notion that an extraterrestrial might come across it in the distant future - and naturally possess the superior intelligence to quickly solve the code.

Tomita shrugs off the obvious question: "Who in the world is going to read bacteria?"

"Many people never even thought about storing data for thousands of years," Tomita said.

"This may sound like a dream. But we're thinking hundreds of millions of years."

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be well,
Zoe

-_-
 

 
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