Data Storage Pioneer Wins Millennium Technology Prize
jones_supa (887896) writes "The British scientist Stuart Parkin, whose work made it possible for hard disks to radically expand in size, has been awarded the Millennium Technology Prize (Millennium-teknologiapalkinto). Professor Parkin's discoveries rely on magneto-resistive thin-film structures and the development of the giant magnetoresistance (GMR) spin-valve read head. These advances allow more information to be stored on each disk platter. Technology Academy Finland — the foundation behind the award — justifies the prize by saying that Parkin's innovations allow us to store large volumes of data in cloud services."
He is currently working on Racetrack memory, which would obsolete flash and hard disks (and probably even RAM).
Well, one of them...
Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
At least 4 living... Tim Berners-Lee, Stephen Hawking, Peter Higgs and many more now deceased.
TFA:
The first use of spin-valve sensors in hard disk drive read heads was in the IBM ® Deskstar 16GP Titan, which was released in late 1997 with 16.8 GB of storage.
1997. That's why I was scratching my head and wondering what radical expansion. In my view, HDDs have expanded on a steady exponential curve in size since ... forever.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Hard_drive_capacity_over_time.svg
I understand how it might be a viable substitute for ram, but I'm not sure if it's persistent like flash storage. Which would make it an abysmal substitute for hard drives.
File under 'M' for 'Manic ranting'
And they get to offset that cost by running a more efficient operation thanks to higher density disks. Ultimately that also means less hard drives than if they were all using 6.4 GB driver, and less staff to chase them down when they flake out. Not to mention what they save on their power bill. Also, sometime in the last year cloud storage and services stopped being a buzzword and entered reality.
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Without this their main expense wouldn't be bandwidth.
You know, storing vast quantities of stuff on disk was a good starting point, and worthy of recognition.
And then they had to go and mention the cloud and spoil it.
This is why we can't have nice things, because you can't talk about anything without reverting to the latest buzz words.
Lost at C:>. Found at C.
Its been years since I've even seen a 24", 50 platter hard drive. They seem to get smaller every year.
Have gnu, will travel.
Yeah but they have ass breath and rotting, discolored teeth.
Only because our leaders keep taking advice from the Americans about how to run a health service (and for some reason, dentistry has taken a far worse hit than other services: even if you can find a national health service dentist you still have to pay non-trivial sums for treatment if you're not a child or OAP - c.f. Doctors where the worst case is max ~£10/month for prescriptions. I guess not enough babies die from toothache to motivate the opposition).
Anyway, once they all rot and fall out you can get dentures and enjoy unnaturally white, uniform, plastic-looking teeth just like an American.
Plus, we're much more reluctant to humiliate teenagers by forcing them to wear mediaeval torture devices to straighten their teeth just when they're most sensitive about their appearance.
In a survey of 100 programmers, 111111 thought that duck-typing was a good idea.
I still remember the first computer I encountered with a 1GB hard drive back in 1995.
At the time, with Windows installed the HD was so overwhelmingly empty as to have an echo.
People used to go over and sit at the machine just to bring up a file browser and see the listed free space and go "oooh .... pretty".
Fast forward a few decades, and you can buy and 8GB USB stick in the express checkout at Wal Mart next to the bubble gum (literally).
Every now and then I need to remind people that their smart phone is a computer which is at least a million times faster and with at least a million times more capacity that the first ones I got to use. Because storage was measured in KB, and processor speed was in KHz.
I once joked to a university professor that 1GB of iron core memory would alter Earth's magnetic field beyond belief. Now I can't find many people who know what I mean by iron core memory.
Of course, I had an onion on my belt, which was the style in those days ...
Lost at C:>. Found at C.
Instead, you've decided to go with the long drawn out process of having them be sensitive about their appearance for the rest of their lives.
Why settle for just a few years of humiliation, when you can have a lifetime's worth?
Suddenly all those stories about British schools make much more sense. ;-)
Lost at C:>. Found at C.
Yeah, they'd be electricity and property taxes for the acres of space you'd need for all those drives.
I remember some of the components which used to be hooked up to the VAXen at my school ... the MBytes/unit volume ratio wasn't exactly favorable. :-P
Lost at C:>. Found at C.
Professor Parkin work dealt mainly with spinning disks for data storage.
Parkin's son's work deals mostly with shaking.
Millennium award? That sounds either 13 years late or way, way too early.
Coder's Stone: The programming language quick ref for iPad
I know, don't feed... but you're wrong :)
http://www.economist.com/node/...
Brits have some of the healthiest teeth in the world, but it's a different culture here than in the US. In the US, if you're poor, you don't get your teeth done because it's expensive. Here it's free-for-all due to the NHS, but the NHS budget is such that it would be considered a waste to spend taxpayers money on the cosmetic treatments such as the capping and polishing and whitening that are so common in the states. Straightening is normally only done when there's a medical need for it. Obviously, all the same cosmetic treatments are available privately but most people balk at the cost even without the cultural bias - free private dentistry is a perk of my job but still no-one goes for american-style white gnashers.
Haven't had a cavity or anything in fifteen years but by american standards my teeth might well be considered horrible since they're not pearly white (thanks, tea, coffee and fags!); personally, I don't like perfectly even white teeth since to me they look like a horse just jumped out of a toothpaste advert.
Now, if you'd have brought marmite into the conversation you'd have had a point.
Moderation Total: -1 Troll, +3 Goat
Bah, you kids and your fancy schmancy 1Gb HDD. My first HDD was 10Mb. Of course, it was an upgrade to the 720kb floppy drive on my Atari ST with the massive 512Kb RAM (later upgraded to 1024Kb by soldering more RAM chips). All of these were big upgrades to tape drives (literally audio cassette drives) - the seek times on those were..... disturbingly long. I still have an old 8088 machine in the corner of my lab with a 20Mb hdd (and an ISA monochrome video card).
IT's funny how fast you get used to them. White teeth sued t stand out. Now when watching a show an on character has, what woud have been normal yellow teeth a decade ago, it stand out as dingy.
The Kruger Dunning explains most post on
bah. In my day, we were envious of the system whose tape spindle had faster spin response.
The Kruger Dunning explains most post on
"which would obsolete flash and hard disks"
I think you're missing a VERB there... 'Obsolete' is not a verb... Neither is 'leverage', by the way, dickhead 'business types'...