MadRk photoblog

Passionate learner of biology and photography

The $1,000 Genome, and the New Problem of Having Too Much Information | Popular Science

Scientists needed $3 billion and 13 years to sequence the three billion base pairs encoded in a single human genome—the first time. By 2011, eight years after that first project was completed, the cost of sequencing a human genome had fallen to $5,000, in a process that took just a few weeks. And in January, Jonathan Rothberg, a chemical engineer and the founder of the biotech company Ion Torrent, unveiled an approach that is faster and cheaper still. He says his machine will be able to sequence a human genome, some 3.2 gigabytes’ worth of data, in two hours for just $1,000. Now thousands, and soon enough millions, of patients will have their genetic makeup laid bare, which presents an entirely new problem: How to analyze all that information?

(Source: adamjundt)

photojojo:

The joy with which we photograph.
Photo by Tomoji Hirakata (Thanks Ambercakes!)
Concealed
Turns
adamjundt:

Striking Multiple Exposure Shot of Takeoffs at Hannover Airport
Waiting with hope
Bars
curiositycounts:

Simply put…
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Entering the Unknown on Flickr.
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Communication Center on Flickr.
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