Silent_Buddha
Legend
A mass produced Holographic ROM disc wouldn't cost $100. If the GE format finds its way into a console, it'll have a lower cost ROM format with a around 200 GIGS of storage. There is no need to go for high numbers like 500GB, since they would only hurt manufacturing yields.
If your company is something like a hospital and you want to buy blank 500 GB rewritable discs to archive medical files, then those might cost $100 per disc.
The problem with that is they still have to figure out a way to mass produce it cheaply. That's the largest obstacle it has to overcome in order to gain any sort of widespread use.
The GE breakthrough gets them a little closer, but as with all previous holographic breakthroughs they are still a LONG LONG way from getting it to the point where it's economically feasible to manufacture at a cost that its intended market will bear. And it's initial market will likely be the server market which is far more likely to bear the cost of system where each disk may cost up to 100 USD or more when it is first introduced.
As an exercise compare the breakthrough of Blue laser optical disks to when they were finally rolled out for consumer use (hint, more than 6 years). And that involved a storage system that is inherently cheaper to produce than Holographic media. Holographic storage has been dangled and promised since the 80's and possibly earlier. I'm still waiting for it to hit consumer price points. I still remember back in 1988 where holographic storage was "competing" with Compact Discs to see which would become the dominant storage medium for the 90's.
Regards,
SB