Wednesday, 6 March 2013

DNA as memory element

Scientists Turn DNA Into Rewritable Memory

DNA, the strings of chemicals which define us, acts like a kind of read-only biological data storage device. Now, though, synthetic biologists have managed to turn DNA into a form or rewritable memory, just like that in our computers.
While it's not the first rewritable biological storage system to be made—others have used proteins which bond to DNA to perform a similar function—it is the first time such an effect has been achieved in the DNA itself, and it could make synthetic digital cells a possibility.
To achieve it the researchers, from Stanford University, spliced genetic elements from a bacterium-infecting virus into the DNA of Escherichia coli. What they were left with is a system which contains a stretch of DNA flanked by sites which indicate to enzymes that the DNA can be "cut" and then "pasted" in reverse orientation—and that's just what happens. In fact, the process can be performed over and over, with the team so far demonstrating that is can be done at least 16 times.
In fact, the project, which is pubslished in PNAS, took three years and 750 designs to work properly. Drew Endy, the lead researcher behind the prohect, explains to Nature:
"It's a pretty sad criticism of the state of technology in synthetic biology where we're trying to program the expression of half a dozen genes and it takes 750 design attempts to get that working. It's like trying to write a six-line code on a computer that takes 750 debug attempts to work."
But even though it took so long to get, right, it's a big achievement. Eric Klavins, of the University of Washington in Seattle, explains to Nature why the finding is so interesting:
"What Drew's group can do that others haven't demonstrated is the ability to cycle the memory element over and over, kind of like you can write a bit to a hard drive, read it and change it back over and over again."

HTC Droid DNA




Specifications

General 2G Network CDMA 800 / 1900
  GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900
3G Network CDMA2000 1xEV-DO
  HSDPA 850 / 900 / 1900 / 2100
4G Network LTE 700
SIM Micro-SIM
Announced 2012, November
Status Available. Released 2012, November
Body Dimensions 141 x 70.5 x 9.7 mm (5.55 x 2.78 x 0.38 in)
Weight 141.7 g (4.97 oz)
Display Type Super LCD3 capacitive touchscreen, 16M colors
Size 1080 x 1920 pixels, 5.0 inches (~441 ppi pixel density)
Multitouch Yes
Protection Corning Gorilla Glass 2
 - HTC Sense UI 4+
Sound Alert types Vibration, MP3, WAV ringtones
Loudspeaker Yes
3.5mm jack Yes
Memory Card slot No
Internal 16 GB (11 GB user available), 2 GB RAM
Data GPRS Yes
EDGE Yes
Speed HSPA, EV-DO Rev. A, up to 3.1 Mbps; LTE, Cat3, 50 Mbps UL, 100 Mbps DL
WLAN Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n, Wi-Fi Direct, DLNA, Wi-Fi hotspot
Bluetooth Yes, v4.0 with A2DP
NFC Yes
USB Yes, microUSB v2.0 (MHL)
Camera Primary 8 MP, 3264x2448 pixels, autofocus, LED flash
Features Simultaneous HD video and image recording, geo-tagging, face and smile detection
Video Yes, 1080p@30fps, stereo sound rec., video stabilization
Secondary Yes, 2.1 MP, 1080p@30fps
Features OS Android OS, v4.1 (Jelly Bean), planned upgrade to v4.2 (Jelly Bean)
Chipset Qualcomm MDM615m/APQ8064
CPU Quad-core 1.5 GHz Krait
GPU Adreno 320
Sensors Accelerometer, gyro, proximity, compass
Messaging SMS (threaded view), MMS, Email, Push Email
Browser HTML5
Radio TBD
GPS Yes, with A-GPS support and GLONASS
Java Yes, via Java MIDP emulator
Colors Black
 - SNS integration
- Active noise cancellation with dedicated mic
- TV-out (via MHL A/V link)
- DivX/XviD/MP4/H.263/H.264/WMV player
- MP3/eAAC+/WMA/WAV player
- Google Search, Maps, Gmail,
YouTube, Calendar, Google Talk
- Organizer
- Document viewer/editor
- Photo viewer/editor
- Voice memo/dial/commands
- Predictive text input
Battery   Non-removable Li-Ion 2020 mAh battery
Stand-by Up to 353 h
Talk time Up to 12 h 40 min
Misc SAR US 0.50 W/kg (head)     0.66 W/kg (body)    
Price group
Tests Audio quality Noise -83.1dB / Crosstalk -83.0dB
Battery life Endurance rating 49h