Holographic storage is coming

chavvdarrr

Veteran
http://www.dailytech.com/article.aspx?newsid=3641
300GB at first, and 1.6TB later

According to reports, Maxell along with InPhase Technologies will be bringing holographic storage technology to the market at the end of this year. Maxell's director of technical marketing Rich D'Ambrise said that 300GB holographic discs will be available in November or December of this year. Maxell also indicated that sometime in 2008, the company will be introducing second generation disc that store up to 800GB of data. By 2010, Maxell is hoping to introduce 1.6TB holographic discs.

In a report, D'Ambrise said "We're happy so far that we haven't hit any obstacles with the drive or the media, and that we're on schedule to deliver to the market." Maxell said that while the technology is currently limited to enterprise customers, producing mass market holographic media and drives shouldn't take long. The company is currently working on producing media in several sizes, including stamps, credit card and regular CD size cartridges. Consumer media will range from 75GB to 100GB in the first generation said D'Ambrise. The new 300GB discs will transfer data at roughly 20MB per second, but Maxell indicated that we should see faster rates as the technology progresses. According to InPhase:

High-definition video. Data archiving. Medical imaging. Massive databases. These are just some of the applications driving the need for faster, higher capacity storage. Regulatory compliance requirements have also pushed this need into the forefront for many IT departments. InPhase’s holographic storage solutions meet the rapidly growing storage demands of business, government, medical, and educational institutions.

According to Maxell and InPhase, two companies have picked up the technology: Pappas Broadcasting and Turner Broadcasting. InPhase sampled out its technology earlier this year around CES time. Many industry experts expect holographic technology to take off in a big way after 2008. Because data is stored volumetrically throughout the depths of the disc, the technology is able to achieve capacities beyond conventional surface recording techniques used in technologies such as Blu-ray and HD DVD.

Earlier this year, InPhase told the press that holographic storage will be available commercially this year and the company has stayed true to its claim. As of now, the new holographic drives will cost roughly $15,000 to enterprises and media will cost roughly anywhere from $120 to $180 per disc. The media is currently a write-once only media, with a lifetime of roughly 50 years. Maxell hopes to improve these figures by the time 2008 comes around.
HD or BR? Hopefully in 5 years noone will remember these ;), holography has the potential to beat them in speed and capacity .
 
As was said over at ArsTechnica, this is always something that is Three To Five Years Away™

Not saying it wouldn't kick ass, but I'm not holding my breath yet.

(And I think, somehow, it might be ironic if the format took off, in spite of HDDVD and BluRay)
 
Yet another reason why people shouldn't be upgrading from their DVD's and TV set's just yet. I'm a PC gamer and also like console games so i'm getting a nice HD tv for my 360 anyway... but I can't help but feel we'd be better served waiting 5-10 years and getting a 2048x2048 screen or something crazy. Maybe the display people won't be able to keep us as fast, but in ten years time, the digital movie guys will easily be able to push 2048x2048 ot whatever widescreen format would be equivalent.
 
I don't care about HDTV (and even then 1920x1080 ought to be enough for anybody). but, hmm, whole series seasons and movies in 720x576, recorded straight from the free aerial MPEG2 signal :p
(well, maybe a trip to the HDD first to separate episods and cut ads)
that would be a quite storage hungry legal source.
 
ANova said:
Let me know when they decide to make a halographic or crystal based hard drive.
Well, unfortunately, holographic technology is incompatible with magnetic storage, so you're basically limited to optical storage for holographic recording. As far as crystaline storage goes, that would be quite cool, but that's not even on the horizon, as far as I know.
 
Back
Top