When I saw a DNA molecule for the first time, it kinda reminded me of a hard drive. It consists of slots and there are some possible combinations for each slot; in the hard drive these possible combinations would be 0's and 1's. In DNA, these slots would be G's, A's, T's, C's.
So, is there a way to measure the amount of bytes that are encoded in a DNA molecule?
I've made this question before in another forum, but the answerer provided me only with Shannon's theorem, which is $K=L-\frac{(1-q^L)^n}{q^L}$ and told me a little about genetic redundancy. I could only search for the ammount of slots which are present in the DNA, but this genetic redundancy thing got me stuck.