Solutions? We could either build six stacks of computer servers that would reach up to the moon (over 370,000 kilometers) or alternatively try to store all of this data in DNA molecules. The latter option would save a ton of space, both in the digital and geographic sense of this term.
Scientists at UW came up with a new technology that would allow to "successfully encode four image files worth of digital data into the nucleotide sequences of snippets of synthetic DNA," Tech Times reported.
It seems surreal, but researchers retrieved the right sequences of encoded digital data from a DNA pool and reconstructed the four images without losing an information byte, the source said.
Comment: Scientists were able to encode four digital images into strings of DNA. This required converting the 1s and 0s of the files into the four basic elements of DNA - adenine, guanine, cytosine, and thymine. But even more challenging was reversing the process without any errors.
โ"Life has produced this fantastic molecule called DNA that efficiently stores all kinds of information about your genes and how a living system works โ it's very, very compact and very durable," said Luis Ceze, one of the scientists who worked on the project, as cited by Science Alert. In the future giant server farms will not have to be built to store data, with DNA data coding, billions of gigabytes could be squashed into a space the size of an apple.
In Barbara Marciniak's, "Bringers of the Dawn", whom we're told was at the time of that writing something of a conduit for the Cs, it was said several times that 3D STS humans' DNA had been disarrayed to the point that it looked like -- paraphrasing -- a vast library through a which hurricane had torn its way; the books were still there but their pages and been ripped from their respective bindings and willy nilly blown together.
In the Cs sessions here we also read that same thing, repeatedly . . .
In combination with this article then one is perhaps given cause for consideration of the nature of the 3D STO human . . .