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Ferroelectric Storage Density Tops 20KDVDs/Cubit^2

DeAshcroft writes "As reported in Technology Research News, researchers from Tohoku University, the Japanese National Institute for Materials Science, and Pioneer Corporation have demonstrated a prototype ferroelectric (as opposed to ferromagnetic) storage mechanism with density of 1.5 trillion dots per square inch. No word on why Japanese researchers are using square inches, but the new storage benchmark is the DVD. This is 47 DVD's in a square inch, or over 20KiloDVD's per square cubit. Original paper appeared in the Applied Physics Letters." In related memory news, an Anonymous Coward writes "It appears the the ever present pause between photo's on a digital camera might finally be fixed. A company now claims http://www.mobilemag.com/content/100/102/C1396/ ) to have kicked up the write speed on a compact flash card up to 4MB/sec. This means we lesser photographers can now get the right action shot just by volume alone ;-)"

12 of 296 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Is this really important? by isorox · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Do we really need that much storage?

    $GENERIC_QUOTE_640K

    Video takes up a lot. Try storing multi-channel (multiple camera angles) uncompessed HDTV, gigs soon add up. Mix in some form of holographic projection and a dash of libraries of congress and you eat up terrabytes.

  2. shz/in^2 by violently_ill · · Score: 5, Funny

    sure, that sounds like a lot of storage, but how many full-length german sheizer films can it hold? when will we start setting standards that are actually meaninful?

  3. Cubit^2 by GMontag · · Score: 5, Funny

    Cubit^2

    This sounds like an achievement of biblical proportions!

  4. Cubits? by MrYotsuya · · Score: 5, Funny

    What the hell, is God telling them to build an ark?

  5. Inches? Cubits? by cperciva · · Score: 5, Informative

    For those of you using sane units, this is about 250 gigabits per cm^2.

  6. My DVD... by istartedi · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...gets 40 rods to the hogshead, and that's the way I like it.

    Really now, the Japanese are using square inches because Americans know what a square inch is, and they do a lot of business with the USA. Seems pretty obvious to me.

    Also, they just happened to reach a "milestone" of 1.5 when measured in square inches. 1 square inch = 6.4516 square centimeters, so this is only about 0.235 per square centimeter. Maybe they should have a press release at 0.3/cm^2. But if it's less than 1, it's just not very good.

    To resolve this issue, I propose the introduction of a new unit based on the meter and corrected by a factor based on Moore's law or whatever it is that governs storage density. The correction factor should be adjusted to allow for press releases oh... say... every 3 months so that stock traders will have something to speculate about. I propose that the new units be called "Horcs" in honor of no particular person, place or thing.

    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
  7. Simpler units by XNormal · · Score: 5, Informative

    The recoring area of a DVD is 14 square inches. So the density of this new recording technique is 14*47=658 times greater than a DVD.

    --
    Stop worrying about the risks of nuclear power and start worrying about the risks of not using nuclear power.
  8. The really interesting bits, no pun intended by Powerdog · · Score: 5, Interesting

    First, they're only currently able to read 25kB/s. Yes, 25 kilobytes per second. They think they can bump up the read speed to 3.75MB/s. But it's the write speed that's curious. The prototype writes at 2.5MB/s, and they estimate they can bump it up to 125MB/s. A medium we can write to faster than we can read!

    Second, their goal is 667 terabits per cm^2. Yep, about 2667 times more dense than the 250 gigabits per cm^2 they're claiming.

  9. Re:Inches? Cubits? by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 5, Funny

    For those of you using sane units, this is about 250 gigabits per cm^2.

    That's 2,412.1 petanybbles per acre, for those of you who prefer units with a little character. ;-)

    --

    I write in my journal
  10. Re:Riiiiiiiight, what's a cubit? by haroldK · · Score: 5, Funny

    "Noah! Both of those DB9 connectors are Female, you have to go back and get another one!"
    "Aw, come on! Can't you just use a gender changer?"
    "You know I don't work like that."

  11. Re:Square cubit? by hcdejong · · Score: 5, Funny

    Why the US still clings to imperial units is beyond me.

    Duh. It's because Americans still measure everything in shitloads.

  12. Re:Square cubit? by dublin · · Score: 5, Informative

    Why the US still clings to imperial units is beyond me.

    Actually, for the simple reason that they're what the technological world was built on, and also the not-inconsequential fact that English units often tend to relate to the real-world better than thier Metric/SI counterparts.

    This is NOT just an artifact caused by familiarity: For ordinary use, the English units are often just more convenient because thier sizes are more applicable to the problem at hand. For instance, in machining and design of precision parts, thousandths of an inch turn out to be considerably more useful than metric units, just simply because of the mechanics of material removal using common machining processes. This is one reason almost all machining in high-precision industries like Aerospace and Oil/Petrochemical/Energy is still done in English units. (Note that the recent NASA Mars probe debacle only happened when one group deviated from accepted industry practice of using English measurements and switched to Metric. (And without even telling anyone, at that!) The simple reason the error was not caught is that no idiot (except maybe a French idiot, they still haven't got over thier Napoleonic pride in the moronic Metric system) would use metric measurements in an aerospace context - it's just not done.)

    Another good example of the oh-so-awkward size of metric units is the liters/100km unit that has to be used to measure fuel econonomy in reasonably sized numbers. Ugh. There are dozens of other examples.

    Units are somewhat arbitrary, but to be honest, in my engineering career, I've seen many more errors with Metric units (decimal point errors, imagine that!) than I have with the English system.

    HELP STAMP OUT THE METRIC SYSTEM!

    P.S.: Of course, what we really need to adopt is a correct measurement system based on Dublins, that perfect unit of length between a yard and a meter, where the acceleration of gravity here on earth would be 10 Dublins/s^2. Physics and engineering students worldwide would celebrate my birthday with fireworks and parties. :-)

    --
    "The future's good and the present is nothing to sneeze at." - Roblimo's last ./ post