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The Art, Music And Computer Science Of DNA

Build6 writes "As part of the 50th anniversary of the discovery of DNA's double-helix structure, many news publications are writing about what has been done with the discovery so far; The Economist has a very interesting one about DNA's use in art and music. ... You can read all about it either by picking up a copy of The Economist (it's well worth the money, I've subscribed for over a decade), or online." And Clint Harris writes "As part of its series commemorating the 50th anniversary of 'the first scientific description of DNA' NPR recently aired a story comparing DNA to software (RealAudio or Windows Media). 'For many, the best analogy for the way DNA works is that it's like a computer program at the heart of every cell. Some of its programming tricks bear an uncanny resemblance to ones the human brain has dreamed up...DNA is [like] spaghetti code because nature has been tinkering with the system for billions of years like a bad programmer.'"

3 of 95 comments (clear)

  1. Anyone else....? by slulovic · · Score: 2, Offtopic

    Anyone else find it funny that most gene sequences are proprietary, and hence even DNA isn't Open Source? --Scott

    1. Re:Anyone else....? by Uber+Banker · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      SUrely you are the troll?

      The parent post hasn;t even been modded yet.

      You are a sad sad sad troll troll troll. loser.

  2. Re:Bad programming? Well.... by Tim · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    "As soon as YOUR code has had uptime of 120 years or so"

    Uhm...it's more like 120 billion years, give or take.

    Of course, I guess that's all considered legacy code by now, isn't it?

    --
    Let's try not to let fact interfere with our speculation here, OK?