Slashdot Mirror


1TB Blu-Ray Compatible Optical Disc Announced

red_dragon writes "An article on The Register tells the news of an announcement of a new 1TB optical drive and disc that will be backwardly compatible with Blu-ray discs. The technology, developed by Call/Recall in partnership with Nichia, uses a rhodamine-type dye in a 200+-layer recording medium that gives off light when excited by a laser beam, along with a single fluid-filled lens to read multiple layers by varying the amount of fluid to change the focal length. The technology is designed to work with Nichia's blue-violet laser diodes, which are already used in Blu-ray drives."

3 of 256 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Typo by simcop2387 · · Score: 5, Informative

    nope, its most likely layer not laser.

  2. Re:Why would a Burned DVD stop working? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Nope.

    For a pressed DVD, a master is etched, and is then used to physically press the pits into the substrate. The depth of these pits (1/4 wavelength) causes destructive interference when the beam hits a pit, and constructive interference when it hits a land. (1/4 wavelength in + 1/4 wavelength out = 1/2 wavelength out of phase with the rest of the beam reflecting off the surrounding substrate)
    This is pretty much permanent, provided your media doesn't disintegrate.

    For a burned DVD, a photosensitive dye is activated by the writing laser. This activated dye simply absorbs the beam that hits a "pit", while the unactivated dye allows the beam to reflect off the substrate behind, when it hits a "land".
    Over time, this dye can degrade such that the unactivated dye slowly activates (either spontaneously or in reaction to ambient light), or that the activated dye slowly deactivates for the same reason (much like a photo left in the sun).

    One of the reasons that "archive quality" disks are more expensive is that they use a higher quality dye which takes longer to degrade.

  3. Re:1TB disc! by Ken_g6 · · Score: 5, Informative

    How many libraries of congress could you hold on that? It looks like 1 LoC = 70TB. So that's about .014 LoC/disc.

    I guess we've finally found something that takes more than one disc!
    --
    (T>t && O(n)--) == sqrt(666)