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July 8, 2007

DVD de 500GB y de 1TB

Buuhhh! aún recuerdo cuanto tener un disco de 31/2" era la gran capacidad, creo que hoy en día hay quien no sabe que existieron, mucho menos de los 5" u 8", en fin, así de rápido va la tecnología.

Pues resulta que dentro de unos cuantos años tendremos DVDs con capacidad de 500GB y de 1TB para el 2010 wow!!

Fuente:http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20070707-microholography-milks-500gb-out-of-dvd-sized-discs.html

Microholography milks 500GB out of DVD-sized discs

By Todd Haselton | Published: July 07, 2007 - 11:16AM CT

A group of scientists working together with the Institute of Optics and Optical Technologies at the Technical University of Berlin claim to have discovered a way to store 500GB worth of data on DVD-sized discs. The scientists are members of the Microholas Project, coordinated by Dr. Susanna Orlic, which plans to double the storage capacity to 1TB by 2010.

The Project aims to implement a microholographic recording techniques which record data to nanostructures in the recording process. By combining multilayer storage and holographic multiplexing, "microholography" allows data to be stored in three dimensions. The technology works by replacing the two-dimensional pit-land structures currently found on CDs and DVDs with microgratings, which are "holographically induced" using two laser beams. In other words, instead of recording to a series of bumps and pits like standard CDs, the new technology creates three-dimensional holographic grids that can be used for reading and writing data throughout the physical structure of the disc.

In order to store data in multi-layer form, the beam is "focused to different depths inside the photopolymer layer," which means that the beam can actually be raised and lowered to write to different altitudes of the three-dimensional holograohic grid.

As you might expect, the project is bullish on its prospects. The discs are predicted to be inexpensive to produce, which the project hopes will translate into manufacturer interest. Of course, there's no word on what the recording devices would cost, and that's a major part of the equation.

Blu-ray discs currently store 50GB of data on a dual-layer disc, whereas HD-DVD can store 30GB on its dual-layer offering. Both formats have greater storage potential thanks to the possibility of adding additional layers. By 2010, we expect to see 100GB and 60GB Blu-ray and HD DVD discs (respectively) available for recording use on PCs.

Microholographic discs (MHD) are transparent and are the same physical size as CDs and DVDs, but the discs being created by the Microholas Project effectively have ten layers with five different wavelengths. The "prototype" discs are recordable and sport a 50Mb/s data rate, but the group expects an "Advanced Device" with 1TB of storage and data transfer speeds in excess of 200Mb/s by 2010.


Key Features

Microholographic Recording Disk Media

  • transparent CD / DVD sized (120 mm) disk
  • recordable (rewritable) high performance disks
  • additional degrees of freedom (3-D, multilayer, multiplexing)
  • high storage capacity ( > 250 Gigabytes)
  • high speed data transfer rate ( > 200 Mb/s)
  • increased data rates (reduced write/read times)
  • visible authenticity through transparency
  • holographic security features
  • disk cartridge protection
  • data recording format (video & digital cinema, enterprise storage, computer storage)
  • low-cost mass-producible media
  • downward compatibility

Microholographic Drives

  • based on CD / DVD technology
  • full downward compatibility to CD / DVD
  • universal drives for multimedia applications
  • convergence of entertainment and computing
  • scale-up of system performance possible without changing the disk structure


1TB optical discs sure would beat the old sneakernet !

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