Researchers in Shenzhen Create Revolutionary Cassette That Uses DNA Instead of Magnetic Tape, With Capacity of 36 Petabytes — Equivalent to Seven Billion Songs, But Still at Prohibitive Cost.
The traditional cassette tape, launched in 1962, marked generations in the 1970s and 1980s. It allowed users to record music, create homemade compilations, and listen to songs on portable devices like the Walkman. However, it also had technical issues: the tape would get stuck in the recorder, lose sound quality, and sometimes required a pen to rewind it. With the advancement of CDs, MP3s, and streaming, the tape became a nostalgic object, a reminder of an analog era. Now, however, scientists in China propose a surprising leap: the DNA-based cassette.
The Chinese Revolution: DNA as a Storage Medium
Researchers in Shenzhen have developed a technology that replaces magnetic tape with synthetic DNA as a recording medium. The new cassette does not store minutes of audio, but rather petabytes of data. Its capacity reaches 36 petabytes, equivalent to seven billion songs — a collection impossible to fit into any conventional digital device.
Unlike digital media, which records data in zeros and ones, the DNA cassette uses the four nitrogenous bases of the genetic code:
-
The same type of jet engine that powered the V-1 bombs of World War II now appears under a motorcycle made in a garage, with thrust of up to about 45 kilograms, which the owner claims exceeds 110 kilometers per hour.
-
Filipino fishermen pull from the sea a 3.6-meter Chinese underwater drone with Mandarin markings near Palawan, and the Coast Guard sees in the object another piece of the silent race to map submarine routes in the South China Sea.
-
With nearly 1.6 km and a capacity for 80,000 people, a floating city aims to navigate the planet with 30 decks, hospitals, schools, a stadium, and nuclear energy, but it has been struggling for 30 years to move from paper to reality in the ocean as a mobile megacity never before constructed.
-
Seen from space, NASA records an Arctic jet stream pushing extreme cold down to Florida and painting the sea with a giant 240 km plume of underwater mud, in swirls that resemble a white storm in the Gulf of Mexico.
- Adenine (A)
- Guanine (G)
- Cytosine (C)
- Thymine (T)
This system creates an unprecedented density of information.
The Amazing Density of DNA
To understand the potential, simply look to nature:
- The DNA of a human cell can store about 1.5 gigabytes of data, equivalent to two CDs of music.
- One gram of DNA has a capacity of up to 450 exabytes, which would correspond to 1.8 billion modern smartphones.
This density explains why DNA is seen as the ultimate medium for the future of data storage.
Advantages Over Current Media
While hard disks, SSDs, and even the cloud have limits on scale and durability, DNA offers:
- High Durability: Information can be preserved for centuries without loss.
- Extreme Miniaturization: Enormous libraries could fit in a small capsule of DNA.
- Biological Security: The material is stable and replicable.
In practice, it would be possible to store the entire catalog of movies, music, and documents on the planet in just a few grams of DNA.
The Price Is Still the Obstacle
Despite the advancement, the technology will not reach the public anytime soon. The process of synthesizing and reading DNA is still extremely expensive and slow. The study itself acknowledges that at this moment, the DNA cassette is merely an experimental prototype.
But there are historical parallels. Just as happened with conventional cassette tapes — which were initially expensive and later became popular — the same could occur with DNA.
Experts believe that with increasing demand and the evolution of laboratory techniques, costs will drop rapidly.
Nostalgia with Innovation
The choice to name the project “cassette tape” is not accidental. The scientists aimed to associate the nostalgia of the 1980s with a futuristic view of technology. It’s as if the tape, once a symbol of portable music, returns in 2025 to hold the digital memory of humanity.
If it ever reaches the market, the DNA cassette could be used for:
- Long-term Archives, such as historical and scientific records;
- Green Data Centers, with less environmental impact than traditional data centers;
- Cultural Preservation, ensuring that music, films, and digital works do not get lost.
Until then, the technology will still be confined to laboratories and academic research. But the mere fact of transforming the code of life into information media shows that the future of storage is just beginning.

Be the first to react!