Turner Testing Holographic Storage
Izmunuti writes "An article in ComputerWorld describes tests by Turner Entertainment of a holographic storage system from InPhase Technologies as a possible replacement for magnetic tape for storing their movies and other programs for playback and broadcast. The article states that each holographic disk holds 300 GBytes." Even more impressive is the cost per terabyte estimated for just a few years down the road.
That's all I want to know. :-)
I want one. And I want a Cortana floating over it. And I want her defragmenting my data and writing my school reports on the fly.
I'll subscribe to Slashdot when I see a month without a dupe, a typo, or an article the "editors" didn't read.
Yup, one day I'll be playing Duke Nukem Forever on a Phantom console, streamed from Holographic storage, and displayed directly on my wall that's papered with Electronic Ink.
Does anyone remember the holographic tape from the movie Brainstorm? I was wondering when something like this would become a reality... Ah the good old days. /reminiscing
From the article: "Their production version promises to be much faster than tape, but we've not seen that yet," Tarasoff said.
So we're reading an article about an executive excited about a prototype demo to his bosses involving technology that won't be available for a year or more??? If that's acceptable, then I have a lot of articles to write!
$nice = $webHosting + $domainNames + $sslCerts
R2D2 is suing Turner for infringement, he had this technology a long time ago.
He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
now I can store all my po rn in a single disk.
How lomg till some corporation vehemently opposes this one?
Manojar - pronounced like Manager
> I want a 100GB recordable disc for under $1.
And a pony. I want a pony too.
- For the complete works of Shakespeare: cat
Graphic on InPhase Technologies website: "Imagine Holding 100 movies in the palm of your hand"
*riiing*
Secretary: "Hello InPhase Technologies, may I help you?"
Secretary: "Oh hello Mr. Glickman of the MPAA"
Secretary: "Our CEO Mr. Diaz is in a meeting at the moment, may I take a message?"
Secretary: "So the message is 'No...effen...way' ?"
I used "tar" to glom it up and then "split" the file into DVD sized chunks and made two copies of the segments on a small spindle of DVDs with a text file on disc #1 explaining how to reconstruct everything. I couldn't think of anything else to do that didn't involve expensive hardware (tape drive) or fancy backup software. It was tedious, but at least I used free stuff available in the Unix layer under OS X.