Scientists are exploring synthetic DNA as a way to store massive amounts of data. Now, University of Missouri researchers, led by Li-Qun “Andrew” Gu, are taking it a step further by developing a ...
Our experiences leave traces in the brain, stored in small groups of cells called engrams. Engrams are thought to hold the information of a memory and are reactivated when we remember, which makes ...
In the face of rising emissions from data centres, researchers are turning to micro-explosions in glass, and using DNA to solve big data's big problem.
Penn State engineers fuse synthetic DNA and perovskite to build ultra-efficient memristors that could shrink power use and supercharge data processing for future electronics.
It could store exabytes of information and last millions of years -- is biology's hard drive destined to be mankind's as well? Share on Facebook (opens in a new window) Share on X (opens in a new ...