1. Earlier discussed here & here in my 2009 posts when the study,the concept and experiments were on test bench have now touched reality....
2. A team of undergraduates and instructors from the Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK) has found a way to store a whole lot of data onto living bacteria cells through a process they call “massively parallel bacterial data storage.” And in addition to storing huge amounts of data, they have also figured out how to store and en/decrypt data onto living bacteria cells.
3. The team has managed to squeeze more than 931,322GB of data onto 1 gram of bacteria (specifically a DH5-alpha strain of E.coli, chosen for its extracted plasmid DNA size) by creating a massively parallel bacterial data storage system. Compared to 1 to 4GB per gram data density of conventional media, the 900,000GB per gram figure the team has returned is genuinely stupefying ie like to fit the equivalent of 450 2TB hard disks (900TB) on a single gram of E.coli bacteria.