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Nano-Scale Memory Fits A Terabit On A Square Inch

prostoalex writes "San Jose Business Journal talks about Nanochip, a company that's developing molecular-scale memory: "Nanochip has developed prototype arrays of atomic-force probes, tiny instruments used to read and write information at the molecular level. These arrays can record up to one trillion bits of data -- known as a terabit -- in a single square inch. That's the storage density that magnetic hard disk drive makers hope to achieve by 2010. It's roughly equivalent to putting the contents of 25 DVDs on a chip the size of a postage stamp." The story also mentions Millipede project from IBM, where scientists are trying to build nano-scale memory that relies on micromechanical components."

5 of 199 comments (clear)

  1. impressive by Hellasboy · · Score: 5, Funny

    i'm impressed... 25 dvds for 1 terabit. but i think were all holding out until we hit 150 zip disks on a square centimeter or 172 ls-120's on the size of a heineken bottle cap.

    --

    "Tread softly because you tread on my dreams"
  2. Fastest Transfer Rate by ryanmfw · · Score: 5, Funny

    So, if we attached a couple square inches of this stuff to a pigeon, or filled a 747 with some of these chips, and flew it around the world, how fast would the transfer rate be?

    --
    Hurricane Ivan: A 17th century prison collapsed. All of the inmates escaped.
  3. OK! ENOUGH BULLSHIT NUMBERS!!! by __aailob1448 · · Score: 5, Funny

    We don't measure HDs in Terabits . 1 Tbit = 128 GBytes or 128 gigs3

    Second, converting this from inches to Centimeters, we get slightly less than 20GB/cm^2

    Yes ladies and gentlemen, 20 Gigs per Squared centimeters.

    That's a nice increase but it sure as hell isn't overwhelming.

    Assuming a radius of 5 cm for a 3.5" HD, we get a surface of 80 cm^2 per platter. That comes to 800 Gb per platter. around 8 times the current density.

    These new-gen HDs will be at most 8 times bigger than those we have right now.

    That's it. 8 times. Not even a single order of magnitude.

    Now mod this up or be destroyed!

  4. At the end of my nose... by exp(pi*sqrt(163)) · · Score: 4, Funny

    ...there is a single atom. Orbiting it is an electron. When it's in a spin up state I consider it to contain a 1. When spin down it's a zero. There: a prototype of a multi exaterapetabit/mm^3 storage device at the end of my nose. Oh wait - I might be able to hype this up more. Oh yes...it's an electron, so it's in a superposition state. It's a multi exapetaterabyte/mm^3 quantum computer at the end of my nose. Surely /. have got to publish this story now.

    --
    Doesn't it make you feel good to know that our freedoms are protected by politicans, lawyers and journalists.
  5. Overheard at IBM... by isny · · Score: 4, Funny

    Boss: What are you two working on? You've been sitting and staring at the screen for hours.
    Engineer 1: Uh....the millipede project.
    Engineer 2: Yeah. Lots of data stored in two dimensional space.
    Boss: Great! Keep up the good work. (Leaves)
    Engineer 1: Whew that was close.
    Engineer 2: In more ways than one. Look out! Here comes the spider again...
    Engineer 1: I love MAME.