Scientists just fit a GIF onto DNA, which might be the most important thing to ever happen to GIF-kind
GIFs are the fundamental building blocks of our digital existence. Whether they are in texts, tweets, or articles, GIFs are **w a staple of how we communicate in the modern world.
But **w GIFs are making their way to a new frontier: Scientists have finally figured out how to store and retrieve them from bacterial DNA.
Researchers at Harvard Medical School used CRISPR, a new, incredibly precise and relatively cheap gene sequencing tool, to encode Eadweard Muybridge's 19th Century animation of a running horse, essentially the world's first GIF, inside bacterial DNA. (Writers **te: NyanCat would have been our choice.)Read more...