Two items of anthology now stored for eternity in DNA

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A few drops of DNA would be enough to store all the world's music! © 2017 EP
A few drops of DNA would be enough to store all the world's music! © 2017 EPFL / Alain Herzog
Thanks to an innovative technology for encoding data in DNA strands, two items of world heritage - songs recorded at the Montreux Jazz Festival and digitized by EPFL - have been safeguarded for eternity. This marks the first time that cultural artifacts granted UNESCO heritage status have been saved in such a manner, ensuring they are preserved for thousands of years. The method was developed by US company Twist Bioscience and is being unveiled today in a demonstrator created at the EPFL+ECAL Lab. "Tutu" by Miles Davis and "Smoke on the Water" by Deep Purple have already made their mark on music history. Now they have entered the annals of science, for eternity. Recordings of these two legendary songs were digitized by the Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) as part of the Montreux Jazz Digital Project, and they are the first to be stored in the form of a DNA sequence that can be subsequently decoded and listened to without any reduction in quality. This feat was achieved by US company Twist Bioscience working in association with Microsoft Research and the University of Washington.
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