Sorry to disappoint those booking trips to costa rica, but this whole idea is seriously flawed. With a little help from the web, I shall attempt to explain the problems with the Jurassic Park scenario.
As explained in the film, DNA strands tens (even hundreds) of millions of years old are full of gaps. This could, perhaps, be overcome by mixing a number of different strands, but the mixing would be haphazard at best (imagine putting a chicken in a blender - what comes out is not what you put in). This is not to mention the enormous amount of electricity that would be needed to power gene sequencers capable of such feats.
Even if you managed to get a usable strand, recreating prehistoric DNA with that of a chicken (or a frog in the film) would be very difficult indeed. It would have to be homologous (ie. have a similar charicteristics) with the chicken DNA - something I am very dubious about.
However, supposing we did have a full DNA strand, what then? In order to make a baby dinosaur, you would have to inject the strand into the fertilized egg of a dinosaur's close relative. But, the development of an embryo is regulated by hormones in the egg and the environment, so the host used would have to recognise the particular bits of dinosaur DNA, this is currently impossible. So, even if this does end up giving us some dino DNA, we would not necessarily be able to create a dino.
As we do not currently (and will not for some time) have the ability to over-come these flaws, Jurassic Park will remain (for now at least) solely on the big screen. We must also remember, that even once we overcome these obstacles, there would be the issue of ethics, would scientists be allowed to bring back dinosaurs? Not to mention the issue of financing the project (probably in the region of billions).
Funnily enough, the article does not mention any of these obstacles

. As Meg-T says, stories like this crop up every few years but will likely never come to fruition.