27 Mar 2006
InPhase Technologies claims to have broken the record for the highest data density of any commercial storage technology after successfully recording 515Gb of data per square inch.
Holographic storage can dramatically boost capacity as it takes advantage of volumetric efficiencies rather than recording only on the surface of the material.
Densities in holography are achieved by different factors to magnetic storage. Density depends on the number of pixels/bits in a page of data, the number of pages stored in a particular volumetric location, the dynamic range of the recording material, the thickness of the material, and the wavelength of the recording laser.
In this demonstration there were over 1.3 million bits per data page, and 320 data pages spaced 0.067 degrees apart were stored in the same volume of material.
A collection of data pages is referred to as a 'book', and InPhase's PolyTopic recording architecture enables more holograms to be stored in the same volume of material by overlapping not only pages, but books.
Three tracks of overlapping books were written with a track pitch of 700 microns. The InPhase Tapestry material was 1.5mm thick, and the laser wavelength was 407 nanometres.
"IT professionals are experiencing enormous growth in their data archives," said Wolfgang Schlichting, research director for removable storage at IDC.
"InPhase Technologies' announcement is an important milestone in storage density, demonstrating the impressive capacity increases enabled by holographic storage. The technology represents a potential alternative to incumbent technologies for archival storage requirements."
InPhase promised to begin shipping the first holographic drive and media later this year.
The first generation drive has a capacity of 300GB on a single disk with a 20Mbps transfer rate. The first product will be followed by a family ranging from 800GB to 1.6TB capacity.
"The latest results from our ongoing tests on holographic data density have surpassed expectations," said Kevin Curtis, chief technology officer at InPhase.
"We are particularly pleased at the rate of improvement. In April 2005 we demonstrated 200 Gb/in data density and a year later the density has increased more than 2.5 times."
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Do you agree?
no they dont.
today's hard drives do NOT get 72mb sustained data rate.. thats burts.. that means it CAN reach that high.. on the average is much much lower, probably aroun 15-20...
Posted by: yoohoo 31 Mar 2006
DVDs not HDs
At those speeds it would be better than a DVD player, but not a hard disk replacement for a PC. What is the power consumption and form factor and how sturdy is it? Is this a possible replacement for hard disks in portable media devices? Those speeds sound perfectly acceptible for an iPod or portable movie player.
Posted by: David McCammond-Watts 31 Mar 2006
as backup
With their later higher capacity drives, they would make great online backup devices.
Posted by: DT 30 Mar 2006
34 hours to write one disk?
so I am the first to admit that I am not a math genus. Please correct me if I am wrong. disk capacity = 300 GB write speed = 20 Mb/sec I think that it is important to note that it is 300 gigabytes capacity and 20 megabits write speed 300 GB * 8 = 2400 gigabits storage capacity 2400 gigabits * 1024 = 2,457,600 megabits storage capacity. ok so: 2,457,600 megabits capacity / 20 megabits per second write speed = 122,880 seconds to write the disk 122,880 = 2048 minutes = 34.13333 hours So to me it looks like this is not going to be a back up method I use on my laptop any time soon. :)
Posted by: Ken Cameron 29 Mar 2006
good work
I know the guys from inphase, and I hope that they can make this a success
Posted by: c 29 Mar 2006
20mb/s is sloooow
that's only 2.5 MB/s today's IDE drives get 72MB/s
Posted by: ewr2san 29 Mar 2006
Wow
If they've really done what they say the have then I'm impressed. Of course all this stuff better be easily compatible with everything else on the market right now.
Posted by: Wingbane 29 Mar 2006
O.O
I WANT ONE!!! Please mommy! I WANT IT!!! Anyways: That looks like it's going to shape how computer stores data in a few years. Totally awesome!
Posted by: Nebetsu 29 Mar 2006