Goodbye Hard Drives? This Start-Up Is Building DNA-Based Storage Faster Than SSD

Bharat Sharma
Bharat Sharma
Updated on Oct 03, 2021, 09:11 IST- 2 min read -275 Shares
Goodbye Hard Drives? This Start-Up Is Building DNA-Based Storage Frameworks

Tired of your conventional storage methods like hard drives and external USBs? Looks like it's time for all of us to switch... to DNA-based data storage? A start-up from Boston named "Catalog" is attempting to do the unimaginable by developing a data storage platform using synthetic DNA.

Co-founded by Hyunjun Park, Catalog is trying to develop DNA-based storage methods that save energy, are reasonably priced, and offer a more secure way to store data using synthetic DNAConventional storage methods like pen drives and hard drives consume a lot of energy to process data and are also vulnerable to security issue owing to limited storage space.

Today, Catalog announced that it had secured a $35 million Series B round funding to keep developing its synthetic DNA-based storage and computation tools.

Funding means good news for DNA tech development

Catalog's CEO Hyunjun Park told TechCrunch that the Series B funding was led by Hanwha Impact from South Korea, with assistance from Hong Kong's Li Ka-Shing's Horizon Ventures, an existing investor.

DNA Unsplash

The current round of funding is expected to be used to improve the pace of technology development, with Catalog's DNA-based computing platform in focus. The platform will allow management of data, computation of data, and even automation!

Also read: Fully Intact DNA Of Teenage Girl From 7,200 Years Ago Extracted By Scientists

With this round of funding, the company has managed to raise $60 million, according to a TechCrunch estimate. In 2020, $10 million were raised as part of Series A round led by Horizons Ventures. In 2018, the seed round fetched $9 million.

DNA Storage Unsplash

DNA storage has multiple uses

DNA storage is not a new idea. In fact, researchers have been working on perfecting it for a few years now. Catalog has developed a custom DNA writer named "Shannon", which is capable of tackling thousands of chemical reactions each second. At full capacity, Shannon can write data at speeds of 10 megabytes per second.

Also read: QAnon Supporter Murders Own Kids For Inheriting 'Serpent DNA' From Their Mom

Hard drive Unsplash

It doesn't appear that the tech will be commercially available anytime soon. For starters, the DNA data storage may be used to detect fraud especially in the economic sector and processing images to find defects while manufacturing among an array of uses.

Are you looking forward to the groundbreaking technology that will break barriers of data storage and computation? Let us know in the comments below. For the latest in technology and science, keep reading Indiatimes.com.  

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Bharat Sharma
Bharat Sharma

I live for all-things-technology - gadgets, novel climate solutions, and startups that are changing the game. In my leisurely hours, you can find me binge watching science fiction films, writing poetry, or dancing to pop anthems.

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