Skip to main content
MIT Corporate Relations
MIT Corporate Relations
Search
×
Events
STEX25
Startups
opportunities
MIT ILP
Sign-In
Register Your Startup
Search
Search
×
STEX Home
Events
Corporates
Event Videos
Startups
STEX25
Featured
Videos
Startups
Search
News
opportunities
MIT ILP
User Menu and Search
Sign-In
Register Your Startup
Search
STEX Home
Toggle menu
Search
Sign-in
Register your startup
Events
Corporates
Event Videos
Startups
STEX25
Featured
Videos
Startups
Search
News
opportunities
MIT ILP
Back to search results
CATALOG
STEX25
Active dates:
January 31, 2019 - January 31, 2019
STEX25
View Feature
STEX25 Participation:
January 31, 2019 - April 30, 2020
Company information
Contact
56 Roland Street, Suite 208
Boston
,
MA
02129
United States
http://www.catalogdna.com
Empty Facebook link
http://www.linkedin.com/company/catalog-technologies-inc
http://www.youtube.com/channel/UC3jA-TU0xUG5etVAjuUtpaw
Empty Twitter link
Elevator Pitch
Elevator Pitch
DNA is a natural information storage medium that offers extreme stability and information density. We are developing a platform technology that will make it economically viable to encode information on to DNA molecules.
Description
Description
The idea of storing information using DNA has been around for a while. It’s just that the cost of DNA synthesis has been a bottle neck. What CATALOG is building can be thought of as a printing press with movable typefaces. Instead of having to synthesize billions of different molecules, we are creating the necessary diversity by moving around the typefaces in different combinations. The world will generate 160 zettabytes of data in 2025. That’s more bytes than there are stars in the observable universe. Conventional storage media like flash-drives and hard-drives do not have the longevity, data density, or cost efficiency to meet the global demand. DNA is the digital storage medium selected by nature that has been perfected over 3 billion years of evolution. It can store millions of times more data in the same volume as conventional solutions, can last for thousands of years, and gives you the ability to physically own your data – even massive amounts of it.
Technology Description
Technology Description
We are examples of DNA-based computers. Not only do we store lots of data in DNA, our cells access and compute it in massively parallel ways. By enabling the storage of previously impossible amounts of data in DNA, CATALOG has taken a huge step in harnessing DNA-based computation.