I know this isn't a biology site but someone might know the computing part of it. In DNA computing what is the analogy between a computer on your desk or laptop and the DNA computer.

Hardware = motherboard, CPU, etc = ? for DNA

Software = ?DNA

Instruction Set = ?DNA maybe everything is machine language, 1s and 0s? I don't know; no compiler that I know of in dna computing.

Assembler? is there such a thing?

Logic Gate?

Wrong website to ask? Just close it. No harm done.

edit: btw, I have the wikipedia are article.

edit: thus far this is pretty good, but not straight forward like I need: http://www.wisdom.weizmann.ac.il/~udi/DNA5/scripps_short/index.htm

edit: http://www.nature.com/embor/journal/v4/n1/full/embor719.html

link|improve this question

75% accept rate
2  
One of the key things we've learned since we first discovered it is more than just the local "bitwise" sequence of DNA that matters, there's also a huge number of secondary effects with how the strands fold up, and get processed or don't get processed. So while our initial understanding might have had a DNA <> machine code parallel, that turns out to leave out to much of importance to be useful. Perhaps it's more like a project such as the linux kernel, where not just the effect of code matters, but it's aesthetic qualities are also a factor in getting a contribution included or not. – Chris Stratton Dec 13 '10 at 19:30
feedback

1 Answer

Strange question. I don't know the answer, i don't know if there is even a correct one.

If i had to choose a characteristic that uniquely distinguishes one computer from another,(just as DNA is unique for every human), that would be some Serial Number (or a combination of Serial numbers).

link|improve this answer
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.