Live Science on MSN
New 'DNA cassette tape' can store up to 1.5 million times more data than a smartphone — and the data can last 20,000 years if frozen
DNA is known to keep its form for centuries, and the researchers found that their tape could store data for more than 345 ...
New 'cassette tape' made of DNA has the capacity to store 36 petabytes of data, which could change the future of digital ...
ZME Science on MSN
Scientists Built a DNA Cassette Tape that Packs 360 Petabytes into a Retro Plastic Shell
They built a cassette tape of DNA big enough to store every song ever recorded. In traditional DNA storage, all the data is mixed together. That’s why it’s so hard to retrieve it. To read one piece of ...
Cassettes tapes are making a comeback, but why would anyone want something so clunky when they can just stream music?
Medium on MSN
6 of the most sold cassette tapes of all time
While cassette tapes are mostly a thing of the past, these are some of the most sold music cassette tapes of all time.
Ex-movie theater projectionist Steve Guttenberg has also worked as a high-end audio salesman, and as a record producer. Steve reviewed audio products for CNET and worked as a freelance writer for ...
Cassette tapes are impractical, and the people who buy and produce them agree. Yet, a community of listeners continue to keep them alive. “It’s ridiculous buying cassettes and having a cassette player ...
In an era of music streaming and digital downloads, an old format is once again becoming popular. Modern music audiences are rewinding and hitting play on a cassette tape revival. Stephanie Sy reports ...
This clip from a 1971 episode of the BBC television show Tomorrow's World has so many appealing details to me, most notably the featuring of a lovely UK-spec 1962 Volkswagen Beetle, but the true star ...
Add the surprise return of the cassette tape to the long list of why the last couple of years have been some of the strangest in recent memory. After a number of strong years for the vinyl record, the ...
We may earn a commission from links on this page. You can still walk into music stores in Japan and see albums released on cassettes. I'm not sure which is more amazing: Being able to walk into a ...
One can explain the recent boom in vinyl record sales in terms that make sense to an audiophile: A vinyl record often sounds more nuanced than music in a compressed digital format. But the growth in ...
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