DNA storage finally reaches mainstream (well, sort of) — but it will cost you a whopping $1,000 per KB (yes, kilobyte)

DNA storage finally reaches mainstream well sort of — but

DNA storage is finally within reach with the promise of being able to store billions of terabytes of data in a small volume, for hundreds of years and at minimal cost. In a tantalizing breakthrough, French company Biomemory has introduced credit card-sized storage devices that can each store one kilobyte of data on DNA.

For $1,000 you get two identical Biomemory cards; yes, they are very expensive – the first commercially available hard drive (IBM 350-1) sold for $34,500 for 3.75 MB – and slow; but this is mainly a proof of concept. The DNA on the card is dried; it must be rehydrated and read by a sequencing machine (Biomemory is working with a third party to make this happen).