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Posted Feb 11th 2008 4:42PM by Donald Melanson
Filed under: Storage

There’s certainly no shortage of research going on into unconventional means of storage, but one of the most unusual has to be protein-based storage, which we haven’t heard much of in quite a while. That now looks to have changed, however, with some researchers in Japan boasting that they’ve made some considerable progress with the so-called “recordable proteins.” To that end, Tetsuro Majima and his team reportedly employed a special fluorescent protein to record an information pattern on a glass slide, along with what’s described only as a “novel combination of light and chemicals” to read and, most importantly, erase that information. While it’s obviously a long ways from replacing your hard drive, the researchers apparently see no shortage of potential applications for the technology, including using the proteins to improve biosensors and diagnostic tests.

[Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons]

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Author:
admin
Time:
Tuesday, February 12th, 2008 at 12:18 pm
Category:
electronica
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