Movie Playback From 1TB Holographic Disc
qorkfiend writes "Optware Corp. has announced successful playback of digital movies on a new holographic recording disc with a reflective layer. Known as the Collinear Holographic Data Storage System, the disc has a one terabyte storage capacity and one gigabyte transfer speed. The disc size is 12cm, comparable to that of a DVD and a CD."
That's a big file format, and it will take a while to download.
First I will protect the internet from attack including This Land is My Land. And was Mark CueBall right about media size halting piracy? But, didn't we just read that size doesn't matter.
Since when is 12 cm the size of a DVD or CD?
pm
** "It's not my job to stand between the people talking to me, and the ones listening to me." -- Pego the Jerk
GNAA Announces Endorsement of Matroska Container
Wenzenbach, Germany - Having found the AVI video format lacking, GNAA decided to search for a hot new container format, for use in releases of all GNAA video, including upcoming subtitled versions of Gayniggers From Outer Space.
GNAA president and A/V wizard timecop immediately turned to the opensource commmunity, the first place anyone would look for high-quality, well-supported software. A few Google searches later, he stumbled across the Matroska container format, and it was love at first sight.
"I've alyways supported open standards, and I was really excited once I found them. [Matroska] It's basically another competing media container format, like AVI, an envelope in which there can be many audio, video and subtitles streams, allowing the user to store a complete movie in one single file. This ensures that the audio and video can be played in most media players. As long as they manage to download the libraries and DirectShow filters needed, compile them, and then you're good to go." said timecop. "Of course, you can't demux all the streams in a .mkv, so it's less than worthless, but I mean, this is a
format Gay Niggers can really get behind. There are at least 4 developers
working on it, and TENS of users release video in .mkv format."
Upon finding that the sole distribution site for the sources he needed was down, timecop delightedly added "welcome ot openfuckingsource." Upon discovering that the latest version of the source wouldn't work properly under Windows, he congradulated the developers on sticking it to "The Man" [Bill Gates], adding "I assumed people around here had enough sense to give up on dead alternative OS's [Windows] around the time BeOS took a trip down the shitter."
GNAA member godspeed added "ROFL. Matroska is developed by Gay Niggers, how can we, the GNAA, not support it? We've been searching for a container format that has the feature that once you put something into it, you can never ever take it back out except for playback, so Matroska meets our needs perfectly. FRIST POST!!!!1one"
Matroska developers were busy writing a multimedia framework for BeOS and not available for comment.
About Matroska
Matroska aims to become THE Standard of Multimedia Container Formats. It was derived from a project called MCF, but differentiates from it significantly because it is based on GBML (Gay Binary Meta Language), a binary derivative of XML. GBML contains all the useless features of XML in a obscure and overengineered binary format, impossible to parse without obfuscated binary parser libs, and definitely not "human readable". GBML enables the Matroska Development Team to gain significant advantages in terms of future format extensibility without breaking file support in old parsers and allows them to push the limits of the gay video frontier. Some of the notable video codecs which have been used with Matroska include "RealVideo9" and "XVID".
Stated goals include creating and documenting a modern, flexible, cross-platform compatible Audio/Video container format, in combination with an open codec API, to form a free and open media framework, as well as establishing Matroska as the opensource alternative to existing containers such as AVI, ASF, MOV, RM, MP4, and MPG, however due to limited developer time, all current efforts are focused on getting Matroska running under BeOS. "Who needs to use a format everyone can already use, which is well supported by ALL modern OSes? Our opensource shitfest will soon replace the well-established, useful container formats."
About GNAA:
GNAA (GAY NIGGER ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA) is the first organization which gathers GAY NIGGERS from all over America and abroad for one common goal - being GAY NIGGERS.
Are you GAY
One gigabyte transfer speed?
Per second? Hour? Day?
My netflix movies come overnight. If I get 4, that works out to almost a gig per hour...
Life is the leading cause of death in America.
does it actually playback holographs!?
Tsk tsk for not getting your units right. One gigabyte transfer speed? What? One gigabyte per second? Per hour? Per Martian solar year?
FIRST POST?
...they expect the technology to be on the market within a decade, right?
Just like all the previous amazing new storage technologies, of which only one or two percent ever turn out to be commerically viable.
Back in the '90s, weren't we meant to be using little holographic cubes by the year 2000? Funny how those never showed up, eh?
fp!!
[move
Holograms watch you!
The CSLib owns the GNAA.. AGAIN!
Just think of how much pr0n one could store with one of those beasties!
Is that one gigabyte per second? Per hour? Per throw?
Th
I wonder why the didn't make it EXACTLY the same size as a CD/DVD? One would think this would make life so much easier for everyone. I'd settle for ~900GB on a disc, if it meant it would fit in all the existing technology/drives/spinners/changers that are already out there...
Otherwise, this is just another "LASERDISC" with better technology that just won't catch on...
Check out the best P2P sharing website: MEDIACHEST.COM
Optware is using a polymer developed by Aprilis.
You can find more technical details here: Technical Publications
The founder of Optware used to work at Sony, and other technical guys working for them were involved with Blu-Ray. I guess they got tired of working by the hour. Heh. Finally, here's an EETime Article that goes into more detail about the Optware product.
Personally, I just want to know when I can buy a burner.
"Guess this means I'll have to buy the white album again..."
------
"And may your days be long upon the earth."
I've already heard plenty of complaints about a scratch destroying more info on a DVD than a CD due to density. How much would an errant fingernail wipe out on something this dense? I can appreciate the cool factor of cramming so much data on a single disc, but if I have to handle it like a Fabrege (sp?) egg, what's the point?
There is a difference between "insightful" and "inciteful" other than spelling.
Now I can carry Emacs around with me....uncompressed!
A way to back up all the data in my house. Now I just need to contact all the HD manufacturers and tell them to stop maker bigger HDs so that removable media and permanent media will come into parity in terms of relative size. Backup mediums should always be removable, random access devices with more capacity than the primary storage.
Un-news
... recursive compression that results in an asymptotic curve towards a minimum size for already-compressed data over 'x' runs that I've been working on, and you can store pretty much anything on a single holographic disc!
Oh yeah, and the obligatory mention of a Beowulf cluster of these things, and how we all bow down before our new holographic data masters, and Bababoowie...
ITWeeniesAreWorthles
IT, IS, and MIS people suck. They're overblown tech school dropouts who are finally realizing their worth in this econo
Me thinks that'll keep people from copying for quite a while. Doesn't sound like it'll be a anywhere near a consumer device for quite some time.
Not to mention the cost of media...
--Coming up with something clever... please wait...
...but you can call me when these things are an actual PRODUCT. Many companies have been claiming massive data storage abilities, some in the range of hundreds of terrabytes! Yet not one has provided a realistic product. Problems include:
- Too costly to manufacture at a profit
- Holographics are too susceptible to damage from scratches or normal wear
- Lasers are difficult to keep calibrated
- whole bunch of stuff I'm not aware of
I really would love to see a format that could play hundreds of hours of uncompressed HDTV video. Despite all the press releases, the reality is that it's just not here yet.
Javascript + Nintendo DSi = DSiCade
Heck, even my old 300 baud modem has a "one gigabyte transfer speed", if you measure in bytes per decade.
Have you tried turning it off and on again?
confirming 74e
A 1 gigabyte transfer speed! That is so fast! I could store this new disk in my new 12-minute wide closet.
A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
I just measured one. 12 cm.
ObSheesh: Sheesh!
--- Ban humanity.
I love the technology, but you got to make the media more durable. I hate today's DVDs/CDs that scratch from the slightest mishandling. Those of use with kids (not intended for parents with 30+yrs still living with them, I mean young childen) know the horror I seeing your 2 yr old running around with you prized XXX DVD screaming "I want watch Blues Clues, plez)
"Look Lois, the two symbols of the Republican Party: an elephant, and a fat white guy who is threatened by change."
But when will the computer writers and re-writers be released?
I'd love to backup my hard drive onto this media. Let's see, I can put my hard drive onto it 6.25 times!
Ok, so what can this be used for besides keeping copies of my families DNA or all the books at the public library?
Get your Unix fortune now!
now how am i gonna splice my one frame of pornography in the middle of those things?
Sony has announced a new Holographic+ format that is identical in every way except that it is totally incompatible, requiring onerous license fees.
Sony executives reached for comment would only say "Have you seen my new house? It's made of MONEY!".
Does that mean I have to buy Star Wars again?
Sweet. I was just thinking how we needed another format to compete with HD-DVD and Blu-Ray for the future technology. Tri-mode DVD players anyone?
They should just skip Blu-ray and release this one. It may take a little longer to get into production, but why would peope buy Blu-ray drives if this one won't be far behind?
Task one - make a product that works. Great!
Task two - get marketing in there and come up with a better acromyn, because CHUD's is already taken.
Now in Super High Definition Video:
"... help me Obi-Wan Kenobi, you're our only hope..."
Don't worry everyone, we will see another story here on /. in a day or two, on a new storage mediea that is faster and better. I think it's getting rediculous all these new storage devices, Who needs 100 tb of storage for personal use (reafering to another storage device)
"Could you just put the internet on a disk for me so I can bring it home"
I swear I used to get this question......
Well with that much space you could cache a good part of it huh.
I couldn't fail to disagree with you any less.
Here's a tutorial on Holographic storage: http://www.inphase-technologies.com/technology/
I remember back a long time ago on Reading Rainbow Levar(sp?) Burton visiting a research lab and them showing him a working model of holographic memory. I'm not sure which episode it was but I remember them saying we would have holographic memory "by the end of the decade" Damn vapor... (and no I'm not mixing this up with star trek)
This is not a sig
Since this would seem to have the same life span (rot) of DVD/CD, this could be useful for short-term, full-system backups (depending on what that 1G throughput really meant).
Don't really see the need for 1TB movie/audio capability. Even the LOTR trilogy does not need this much room.
Personally, I just want to know when I can buy a burner.
200GB LTO tapes just don't cut it any more. Seriously. Trying to move terabytes at a time with ten or twenty tapes is a real bitch. Never mind relying on I2 to transfer that amount of data in a short time span. A 1GB disc would be a Godsend for those of us doing data intensive applications. --M
Don't need no trucks no more.
An Indian-American Hindu committed to non-violent thought/speech/action alarmed by the global explosion of radical Islam
RTFA: They're only doing this to make a buck.
When will the corps learn that customers don't want to be treated as mere cash cows?
NBC - The complete 1st season
LOTR - Super extendend limited edition trilogy (1 disc set)
Johnny Carson - The complete tonight show with audio commentary
Google Cache Magazine - DVD-ROM
And all of my 100's of DVD's being re-released in Super High Definition uncompressed format.
http://www.kubuntu.org/
'with a transfer speed of one gigabyte per second (40 times the speed of DVD)'
Do you need me to post the rest of it?
12cm == 5 inches
In the future, I would want to not be isolated from my friends in the Space Station.
1 tb > 50 gb > 4.7 gb
Jump to lightspeed anyone?
I don't think it'll take us 200 more years before we see this kind of storage.s olinearChips.htm s olinearChips.htm
http://littrell.doroch.nl/data/engineering/tech/I
We already have commercial holographic storage now. The disparity in the technological predictions of STtng is miles wide, they were so conservative when it comes to computer technology.
http://littrell.doroch.nl/data/engineering/tech/I
How long before we stop using discs all together ? Anyone care to guess ? 5 years ? 10 years ?
Look back up at my post, now look back down, you're on the Internet. Now look back up. I'm a signature.
That'll sure come in handy as soon as I set up my home IMAX theatre.
[Insert pithy quote here]
What movie did they play back, hmmm? How did that movie get transferred to the holographic disc? Did they rip it from a DVD? Did they pay all of the required fees for showing it to a room full of people? I see lawsuits forthcoming.
I've been reading about Holographic storage for years. I'm sure that eventually we'll have it and it'll be pretty neat. But by the time it gets here it'll just be a step up from some other incremental technology.
My Journal
In related news, the MPAA just crapped its pants
Given that so called ordinary people will not need a Terabyte's worth of storage anytime soon, if a writable version of the 1TB HVD gets to market could this be the last disk you'll need? Hmmm, probably not since history has shown that we always find a way to exceed whatever the maximum storage capacity of a given medium is. I guess people will just fill them up with movies and pr0n. Oh, I'm sure Doom 4 will probably come on one or two of these!
Another question is will the recording and movie industries ever let something like this reach the market. Even if there are never writable versions for the consumer market, they seem pretty skittish about anything that might further ease the storage of digital data. This should be fun to watch!
To the making of books there is no end, so let's get started
12CM disks haven't been patented yet.
thank God the internet isn't a human right.
per parsec.
...on the consumer end.
Given the proven nature of tape-based backup (and the anecdotal/proven(?) volatility of optical-disc backup), I figure the enterprise market won't touch these w/ a 10-foot pole - at least not until it's been on the market for many years.
However, the low-end/consumer-level backup market is mostly using CDs and DVDs these days (due to the cost associated w/ tapes/drives). I see that market segment moving to this more or less instantly, while growing at a VERY rapid pace (similarly to what happened with Zip disks/drives about a decade ago).
(And yes, I am assuming that this won't hit the market for a few years - however, given that the biggest standard drives are about 250GB now - and uncommon - it seems unlikely that drives will commonly be much larger than 2 TB 4 or 5 years out, such that HVD would be an inconvenient backup solution (compare the inconvenience of backing up a 40GB drive -> 10 DVDs, vs. a 4 TVB drive -> 4 HVDs).
The above presumes that they can get the tech out there for a market appropriate price - while the article doesn't shed much light on pricing, I can't imagine that new HVD media would cost too much (prob. a similar prive curve to DVD). However, the price-friendliness of the servo-technology they describe is pretty much an unproven quantiy, so who know how much the players/burners will go for...
Whether the media companies follow-suit and use the media to distribute movies (i.e. create compatible players), I have no idea. However, people will lilely be backing those movies up on these HVDs, even if only to re-burn to MPAA-approved-media-of-the-week later, as I don't see digital distribution of (uncompressed, un-DRM-encumbered) digital HD coming down the pike anytime soon.
Well, the RIAA and MPAA will probably cripple blu-ray, and then stop producing DVD's, forcing a switch.
thank God the internet isn't a human right.
what the princess recorded her message to Obi-Wan on? (the disk she stuck in R2)
Collinear Holographic Data Storage System - C.H.u.D.D.S !!!! Chud is back. Help...
You work for Sony, right?
Nothing like increasing Optical storage capacity by 2.3 orders of magnitude over present 4.7Gig writables and 2 orders of magnitude increase over the proposed 10Gig writable. Can't wait to transfer all of my DVDs and CDs to a single disk!
I understand that the working name was Collinear Holographic Optical Analog/Digital System, until focus groups revealed that consumers expressed a strong preference for video storage solutions not named CHOADS.
In Soviet Rush, today's Tom Sawyer gets high on you.
Heh. :) Yeah, I meant a 1TB disc. Whoops. Still, it's pretty obvious from the context. --M
And in 2002 we were supposed be getting damn close to have Flourscent Multilayered Discs. This was 1TB as well and they had fully functional prototypes. *sniff* *sniff* http://www.zzz.com.ru/index.php?area=articles&acti on=show_article&article_id=135&session_id= 0
...and you've eaten your pen. simply stunning.
Cool, but can it make the Kessel run in less than 12 parsecs?
I wonder where they got the movie they put on that thing.
MPAA Logic:
This movie must be pirated since they can't buy these things in the store yet. Sue them.
Personal Comment:
I've already got seven 250GB firewire drives daisy chained on my production workstation. If my ReiserFS filesystem was a little more small cache friendly I could play Super High-ResiDefition 12.2 Surround Sound movies from it.
Present drives won't read these new discs, but will the new discs require a carrying or storage device that has different dimensions than a common CD/DVD jewel case? If so, that sounds like a pain to deal with to me.
Digital Citizen
http://www.physorg.com/preview785.html
Did you know that you would have to take 1,000,000 pictures a day to fill up a 100 terabyte disk in one lifetime?
The NSA: The only part of the US government that actually listens.
...And you lose access to about 100GB, if not the whole f'ing TB!
Also, to everyone who seems persistent with the "Internet-on-a-disk" comments; here's a little urine in your coffee:
At our site we backup 6TB of data/night. Given that we're not even that big of an Institution (medical), I'd reckon the Internet is pushing into the exabyte range by now.
And the majority of that is probably pr0n.
Big deal. Any old holophone can play movies, it's just a matter of how smart the operator is.
Snickersnee3: Build your own 3-watt Luxeon Star headlamp from scratch
They could get arrested for that if the device doesn't recognize the broadcast flag.. Where did they get this movie? hmmm...
They have to be... it's that singularity thing.
SO, how many library of congress books would fit on one of these disks?
Also what if we loaded a minivan up with these disks and drive the van from washington to moscow. would we have the most PHATest connection or what?
A morning without coffee is like something without something else.
CHoDSS? ("Choads")
Schwab
Editor, A1-AAA AmeriCaptions
Yeah. SDLT would help, but it's still only 50% greater capacity over current LTO drives. Considering a current hardware investment in LTO, switching to a new tape format would have to offer considerably more than that to warrant the transition. And yeah, you are so right about the sensitivity of these tape cartridges to shaking and drops. Which in a tape safe isn't much an issue, but during a FedEX shipment definitely is cause for concern! --M
Good for the pr0n industry.
They say on there that this thing has "one gigabyte transfer speed". Does that mean that in a second's time you can read/write the whole disk? ... what is it? I could not find any info on there about that, or maybe I missed it.
Anyone thinking what I'm thinking? Hard drive replacement and now the the limiting factor is going to be the width of the data path from the drive to mem/cpu
That brings up the latency issue though
Fourty-two!
This will undoubtedly begin the H+/H- wars...
I guess this means that these new discs would be even more sensitive to scratches.
What they should do is put the discs in a small case with a protecting flap that the player slides open to read.
Just like a floppy, where the data was stored on the magnetic disc on the inside of the case and was protected by the sliding thing. They really should have started doing this with dvds, but for this, it is almost mandatory.
"I funded a deep space mission to find 2 neutron stars and smash them together to create enough gold to build my mansion!"
Everyone has his or her own version of this technology, but what about actually make use of it... "Holographic memory offers the possibility of storing 1 terabyte (TB) of data in a sugar-cube-sized crystal." http://computer.howstuffworks.com/holographic-memo ry1.htm
And what ever happened to Mini-disc, they had a great idea to but a case around the disc so when we lightly grazed it with our hand we didn't loose our important data we tried to backup.
So if you want to impress us...
A.) Do the same thing in a small little crystal that I can carry around and not have to worry about scratching and make it reasonably priced and big enough to just buy one crystal.
B.) Go back to the old school days of mini-disc and put it in a permanent protective jewel case so I don't have to blow on it and baby it like an old Nintendo.
Hey look no pointless curley braces or semicolons... just like Python
We already have commercial holographic storage now. The disparity in the technological predictions of STtng is miles wide, they were so conservative when it comes to computer technology.
I'm still waiting for the ST:TNG touch-screen computer consoles. Seriously. I wonder why touch screens have never taken off, even as an additional feature to existing hardware that use other input devices. The whole point of using a mouse or a trackpad is so you could manipulate GUI elements in a manner as close as possible to directly manipulating them with your finger. Ergonomics is a factor, though. Lifting your hands off a surface to manipulate a GUI isn't as efficient as moving them around on a flat surface with input devices close to each other. But as for keyboards, zero-force keyboards are already around, so a touch screen version should be viable.
Anyone else have any opinions/info on touch screens? I'd be interested in links. And does anyone know about touch screens that can handle more that one point being touched at the same time? I presume one of the limitations of touch screens to work as efficient input devices is that most (that I know of) can only handle one point being touched at a time. Making a keyboard would require at least two touch points, for key combinations like the shift key. And as for simulating something like a piano keyboard or a multiple-control console on a touch screen, that would require handling many more points simultaneously.
isn't [conscienceless greed] the only reason any company develops any product?
Nope, never heard of social responsibility, never heard of ethical business practices, never heard of economic justice, fairness, honesty, social justice...
Well, I'll make a wild guess here and suppose that you just might be... American?
what's the point in having millions of tb when it's scratched by dust? that's a bit dramatic but you get the point, it might as well be the Storage Holographic Integrated Technology, and it means nothing unless it actually comes to market and stays there, unlike many other storage types have in the past. don't get me wrong, i think it's an awesome idea, i just think it needs to be protected for durability and come to market, no more promises of the future, i'd just like to see it.
to install Longhorn.
My new
More like ludacris(sp?) speed.
Make sure that copy protection isn't part of any given protocol. Muhahahaha! Too late? oh...
The MPAA has sued Optware Corp. under the DMCA for manufacturing a device that will be used for storing movies and for copyright violations by making an unauthorized copy onto the disc.
The MPAA's Jack Valenti has commented that the Studios are going after the full $150,000/violation, and since it's equivilent to 85,104 Double-Layered DVD burners, they are going after $12,765,600,000.
your kid did you a favor.... even if you do own that god awful movie, why would you admit to it?
/ http://suffocate.us
/ http://johngrayson.com
I imagine a 1 cm thick holographic hard disk, on a PC, with only 10 Tb capacity... My god I'd have to rip 0.1 Mega CD to fill that up ! Or I could miror 10 K times my super-duper Gmail account. It's gonna be supra-cool.
instead of losing a few jpg's you can now lose your entire financial accounts database or pr0n collection, all for the sake of a single tiny scratch/fingerprint
we have anough trouble with cdr reliablity but losing 700mb is not so bad to losing multi-gigabytes to a scratch
They'll figure it out soon enough.
Maybe it's like those camping stoves and lanterns I see advertized as producing "20,000 BTU". Last I checked the BTU was a measure of energy, not power...
Anyone know what's up with that?
Actually, if they'd drop the size by about 25%,
they'd do much better. Then it would fit in a
shirt pocket.
-I like my women like I like my tea: green-
I could back up my entire porn collection on six or seven of these!
Have you ever heard of Reed Solomon Error Correcting Codes?
You should check them out.
I'm thinking they allready built them into the design, and the 1TB is accounting for them allready.
md5sum
d41d8cd98f00b204e9800998ecf8427e
... Now imagine a RAID array of these...
Holographic storage is pretty cool, but pretty tricky.
There's already several technologies close to coming out for 2D storage on to a compact disk sized product. These have a current density of like 1 gb/cm^2 I think and transfer speeds in the hundreds of mb/s to gigabytes. That's what this article is about. A few companies are already looking at it and they're trying to reformulate to support rewritable media better.
The transfer speed is awesome because unlike a CD where data is read off bit by bit, data is transferred to and read from the holographic disks in 1024x1024 squares (1 megabit). The size of the spatial light modulator is 1024x1024 cells. So one single read action pulls off a megabit of data. That's hot shit IMO.
The one that gets me really interested is 3d volumetric storage which would be like storing data in a crystal. They talk about densities of a terrabyte per cubic cm, with transfer rates of a terrabyte per second. This I want to see. Unfortunately I forget the material they're using (I did a presentation on it a while ago) but once you "read" from it the light rearranges the structure and data is lost. So right now they're one time write and one time read devices. Not do good for a hard drive.
Presently here, but not there.
When it stops being lucrative.
You're correct. The only way to stop abuses of this nature is to hit them in their profits, and hit them hard. This means monkeywrenching: Teach them that every time they release a product like this, their offices get firebombed, or a few execudroids get shot.
Teach them that if they consider their profits before they consider the human race, the human race will learn to hate them, and it will take revenge.
You need to invest in DVD condoms. Check out d-skins - protective disc skins.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. Lois, this isn't my Batman glass. - Peter
The HAL9000 uses Holographic storage, so a chronological erasure would not work
Obviously one step nearer with this
anyone know? and do they have a limit on the number of times? like say a cd-rw have these days (about 1000, not for the media itself but the small area used for calibrating the laser. its in a standard cd-r format for some reason)...
if it is unlimited RW (atleast 1000000 times, minidiscs have this) then its well worth it as a replacement for the floppy...
comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
The only real way this would be useful (from a movie standpoint) would be if they included a series of TV shows or movies. Otherwise until a burner came available it would be useless... Once a burner for end user could be developed then it make sense on the common market.
Wonder how many years we'll have to wait for this one?
The Nomad
"Men of lofty genius when they are doing the least work are most active."-da Vinci
Funny? True, but mod parent Insightful!
C00l !!! At least enough space to plop all my pr0n stuff KMA
- This can't be... - Be what? Be real?
I wonder what they look like if you put them in the microwave.
___
It's the end of my comment as I know it and I feel fine.
Been that way since early 1983.
Chip H.
They announced that they were able to do it. This is a prototype, and could very well be a long way off. The /. crowd should be understanding of what that means. It does not mean that movies will be available at Blockbuster on Holographic discs later this year. With new technologies, prototypes like these are usually pretty buggy, but they prove the concept. TFA states that the 6 investors watched movies in meetings (My kind of meeting!) but I'm sure up to the minute they were done playing, the engineers were sweating bullets, worried that something wouldn't work out right.
/. is a forum for nerds who want to know about the bleeding edge of technology. The bleeding edge is almost always years ahead of production (and often demand, too). Look at OLEDs: I saw a 15" widescreen prototype from Sanyo at CES 2003 (Jan), but Active Matrix OLEDs are used at most in 1 consumer product (Kodak camera), which doesn't even ship in the US, and for all I know, may not be shipping anywhere anymore. That doesn't change the fact that it's a cool technology that will change a lot of things. We've just gotta be patient. I think everyone else here knew that.
..if you could write to this disk at the same speed as you could read from it, and do it on the fly, you would not need a hard drive.
---- "Excuse me. Where's the children's gun section?"
If you're burning a pile of binary data, the ondrive compression won't be of much use. But still, 500GB is quite the improvement over 200GB. News to me. Guess I'm not spending enough time reading up on new hardware, thanks for the tip! --M
Since when did bottles in america contain 2 liters? I just thought everything was in oz. and the like. / A wondering Swede.
Yeah, plus think of all the pr0n!
Damn, is nobody able to spell TERABYTE anymore? It has nothing at all to do with our lovely planet "terra". *sigh*
I hear it draws 500 watt-hours.
If so, it would be fantastic - finally *something* with capacity on the order of magnetic disks.
If not, I guess it's just a little better way to watch movies - once we all invest in new 16 megapixel TV sets.
"(!tfel re'uoY) !thgir eht no sdneirf on tog t'nia uoY (!thgir er'uoY) !tfel eht no sdneirf on tog t'nia uoY"
It's ok. They're speaking Chinese.
Program Intellivision!
The reason here is probably analagous.
Computer users in general are not the smartest folk. Present company excluded of course, but avid Slashdot readers are in the minority of those who use computers worldwide.
In other words, stupid people are going to try to stick these things into a CD/DVD drive, and when the drive doesn't read the much newer disc, the person is going to call Tech support and complain.
Sizing it differently (I would assume bigger, but maybe it's smaller to still allow a disc to fit into a 5.25" drive bay) would alleviate some of the confusion.
I for one am looking forward to the day I can buy a disc with all of Star Trek, ST:TNG, ST:DS9, ST: VOY and Enterprise on it.
:)
Though I suspect the Enterprise section may never have to fear wear and tear
This could be a great backup medium, if we can count on it having a few decades or more of shelf life..
-jcr
The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
the disc has a one terabyte storage capacity and one gigabyte transfer speed
...ppeerr what?
You know, I saw the photo, and I said to myself, "Yep. That is exactly what a holographic disc should look like. They got it right."
It's all gold, depth, and rainbows.
i'd hit it so hard, if you pulled me out you'd be the king of britain [bash.org]
Now if you'll please excuse me, I have to get back to my study of high-energy tachyon pulses.
That's nothing: I calculated that a freight train, going 100 Km/hour, having boxcars stuffed with 200G harddrives, delivers about 1400 TB/sec. Typical ping time: around 2 weeks.
Great another spinning disk. I wish we could move away from things with motors - fans, spinning disks etc If it is cool holographics why not leave it stationary and move the laser
Hal 9000 can have proper memories?
Movie Playback From 1TB Holographic Disc
Future headline: "Unfortunately, the project was closed after the MPAA sued Optware for all they've got."
I am NOT a number! I am a - oh wait, I'm number 761710. Look! 761710!
Come on, Mods. This is not informative!
This post ignores the parents assertions about surface density vs. linear density, which is exactly correct. Unless one has fourty+ read heads reading in parallel, the read speed does not scale with surface (planar) density. Each track will have 40x the linear density of CD, and there will be 40x as many tracks to read.
Note that even at 1GB/s, it will still take 10 times as long to read the 1TB disk as it does a CD at 48x.
If the parents post was true, we'd be reading our 250GB disks at ludicrous speed (or 1GB/s) based on simple extrapolation from the read speed of an ancient 4200RPM, 2GB Western Digital HD I have.
the growth in cynicism and rebellion has not been without cause
"I don't want a large Farva, I want a goddamn litre of cola!"
"I don't know what that is."
"Litre is french for give some fuckin cola or I'll kick your ass!"
The Neo-Bohemian Techno-Socialist
Deal with satan! Just check out the photo! That left disc has issues! Red beady eyes and huge gnashing teeth... hmm, maybe i inhaled too many solder fumes today...
Now that would be a backup! Capacity guesses?
Offtopic slightly, I've recently wondered why most HDs sold today are 3.5 inch, one-half-height HDs, but the case will accept a 5.25 inch full height drive in each bay. Did they just throw away the tooling? Why not start producing full size drives and up the capacity?
13 ounces is 375ml, a.k.a. a mickey (not to be confused with mickeys from the states)
26 ounces is 750 ml, a.k.a. a 2-6.
40 ounces is just over a litre and called a 40 (pronounced fo'tie because you want to seem cool and gansta)
60 ounces are not too common and thus don't deserve a slang term.
120 ounces is a texas mickey because, afterall, everything is bigger in texas.
and, everyones favorite, a 2-4, is a case of 24 beers (a.k.a. a flat)
all this information becomes quite improtant if you ever plan on doing any camping on the west coast or just emulating the folks in the mocumentary fubar.
The Neo-Bohemian Techno-Socialist
(can you imagine how long it'd take to burn a disk on a 1x drive?)
"gigabyte transfer speed"?!?! Ok then, my car has a 155 mile top speed. My printer prints 15 pages black and white, 12 pages color. My resting heart rate is about 80 beats. My cars gas economy is 18 miles. There, all done.
I just measured one: exactly 4.75" wide. Which translates to 12cm on a more advanced measurement system than the medieval one they use in exactly two countries in the world today, one of which is Burma/Myanmar.
I got a good idea! since these "holo disks" are so goddamn small and can hold like.....1 terabyte of info, why don't they just stuff one of those into the computer instead of an old fashioned magnet drive? think about it.......I'll never have to delete another porno again to free up space.......
Of course this will work. There are no 1Tb hard drives to copy the.. ...oh wait.
You should have taken the LOTR uncut plus extras on one disk to it's logical conclusion. Specifically, you can cram a lot more of the same quality on one disk. Say, an entire season - or even run - of DVD quality television, encoded at high bitrate, without having to sacrifice any "extras" like alternate audio tracks. Plus extras galore. (and the disks we have now could stand to support much broader data and functionality, but that's another story).
---If you can't trust a nerd, who can you trust?
Uhhuh and the price and compatability is?
This is actually a very very complex and interesting question.
Traditional holograms... the interferometric recordings of 3 dimensional objects have an interesting property: data about all parts of the object are stored EVERYWHERE on the hologram.
You damage a part of the hologram, you still get the entire image of the original object, but it (for example) gets a little fuzzier or you have an angle you can't view it at...
Yes, I know it sounds wierd but it is true... I didn't fully understand it until my second semester of graduate optics.
I really wonder if the holographic structure of the data storage will improve the robustness of the media.
"Also I've been dealing with measurements for my house recently- anything below an inch isn't worth it."
Ever been in a house where the wall is 3/4in out from plan? The bedroom furniture did not quite fit properly - inbuilt wardrobe door hit bed when opened [don't ask me why it was not a sliding door]. The ensuite layout had to be rejigged and the wife was pissed off (thankfully it was not my money, house or wife).
You have been warned.
Check plan vs layout to ~0.1in
The Singularity is closer than you think
Quant
Given a 1 terabyte disk, how hi-def could the video be? Let do the math. I'm going to assume base-1000 marketing measurements where "1 terabyte" is actually exactly 1 trillion bytes.
;)
Assuming a 2 hour movie at 24 frames per second...
2*60*60*24 = 172,800 frames
1 terabyte / 172,800 frames = 5,787,037 bytes per frame
If we stick to uncompressed but low dynamic range pixels then we need 3 bytes per pixel...
5,787,037 / 3 = 1,929,012 pixels per frame
That's actually slightly less than the 2,073,600 pixels in a 1080p (1920x1080 progressive scan) highest-end HDTV image.
Of course, WMV9PRO compression supposedly delivers something like 2 hours of 1080p on a standard DVD. If we accept compression, the math becomes much easier. Given that 1 terabyte is roughly 200 DVDs you can do:
1) 400 hours of 1920x1080 video
2) 2 hours of 26,880x15,120 video
3) any balance between 1) and 2)
Personally, I'd like to see some of that extra space go to delivering 72 frame per second, 16 bit per channel video. That 6x multiplier would still give us approximately 66 hours of 1080p video even if the compression only scaled linearly.
Let me know when it hits the shelves.
Key quotes:
Why OpalCalc is the best Windows calc
Why are these things getting faster than my hard disk? Hell, they:re offering 100mb ADSL here now. I don:t think my HD can write at 100mb.
Whats going on??!
You know you're only giving me a task that I enjoy, right maynard? I enjoy ruining your goatee-stroking pseudo-intellectual good time. It's funny how you've come full circle because you can't stand any other conditions. Prepare to periodically be smaked down with modbombs, maynard.
a small laser disc...
Large print giveth, and the small print taketh away
The disc is just the simplest hardware method for moving a physical object closer to another object. In this case the two objects are a piece of disc which contains a desired piece of data and the piece of equipment responsible for reading the data from the disk. It's actually a spinning disc and a motorized reader which moves in and out on the disk, but the point is that it's technologically simplistic and easy to manufacture.
If we could do something cheaper, I'd give it 5 years. I say cheaper because people are reluctant to replace what they've got unless you can give them more value than they have right now. So it has to be cheaper in order to be widely accepted. But I'd give it 5 years.
But you couldn't do it in the USA. You'd have to do it elsewhere first. Japan likes new gadgets, start there.
Reinvent the wheel only at either a lower cost, greater effectiveness, or your own personal enrichment and satisfaction.
Linux ... was developed mostly by a group of people who felt that they wanted to contribute to the greater good of the computing world...
Sorry, but in general that's bullshit. The vast majority of the volunteers did it (and do it still) because a) it was cool code to work on, and b) they wanted to use it. This is true also of many of the folks working on it for pay at IBM, Red Hat, etc. Sure, they may believe that it's for the Greater Good, but that's not the essential motivation.
This is all abundantly documented.
...I will be able to put my pr0n collection on one disc...