Abstract

Discusses how bacteriorhodopsin is a revolutionary material in the battle to bring computing down to the molecular level. Amazing advances can be made by using this protein in three-dimensional optical memory. A five cubic centimeter volume of bacteriorhodopsin studded polymer could theoretically store 512 gigabytes of information. Whereas a 36 cubic centimeter DIMM (dual in-line memory module) currently can only hold 64 megabytes.

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