On April 19, Hitachi Maxell, Ltd. announced the development of new volume optical storage technology that can provide terabyte-level storage capacity in a compact device. Relying on unique nanoimprint technology, the company has succeeded in reducing the thickness of DVDs to 0.092 mm (92 micrometers) -- which is 1/13th the thickness of current DVDs -- while maintaining the standard capacity of 4.7 GB.
The system features what the company calls Stacked Volumetric Optical Disc (SVOD) technology, which consists of 100 ultra-thin optical discs (12-cm in diameter, the same as current DVDs) loaded into a 6.5-cm (2.5-inch) thick cartridge. The result is a compact optical disc library system (1/10th the conventional size) capable of combining random access memory and long-term storage.
When laminated on both sides, disc capacity will reach 9.4 GB, bringing the 100-disc cartridge up to near-terabyte level with 940 GB of storage. The company claims that next-generation blue laser technology could boost cartridge capacity to 5 terabytes (50 GB for each double-sided disc).
According to Hitachi Maxell, potential applications of this storage media include library systems for business and institutions. While continuing to investigate other applications, the company aims to cultivate the market by presenting this technology at academic conferences and exhibitions.
The discs will be priced at under 40,000 yen (US$325) for a stack of 100.
[Source: IT Media, Hitachi Maxell press release]
mato
thats just bonkers!
[ ]Banned Stuff
I dont think it is true anyways, looks really Interesting
[ ]Weird Videos
Hilarious if it is true :)
[ ]engineering
amazing.......thin,smart & the storage capacity is also fantastic....yaap.......its true & it touches the realtiy of dream.........:)
[ ]GFYM
The photo is clearly 'shopped, because the reflection on the dvd is from a flat one, not a bended one.
[ ]The light will be different were it bends.
Nick
Im sure that if they are real, they would be unbearably slow. The disk is too thin to spin at the speeds in current drives without shattering, and in fact cds come quite close to physical limits within cd drives. I guess with many disks in paralell, speed would be improved, but with a massive increase in cost due to more reading heads. And what's wrong with a simple hard drive?
[ ]kost
just if you are interested to read the original announcement (which is in Japanese) - i ran it through Google Translator, enjoy :)
http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.maxell.co.jp%2Fjpn%2Fnews%2F2006%2Fnews060419.html&langpair=ja|en&hl=en&ie=UTF-8
[ ]dave
it's amazing how people think everything is a hoax.. they've been working on this technology for a long time. they used to call em holographic discs, but because people are so hd (hi def) crazy nowadays, they have to call em "stacked volumetric optical discs" to avoid confusing the acronym-dependent masses.
[ ]DAVE IS A FREAK
God, "dave", I hope you're a troll who says it's not shooped because someone, like they always do, says it's shooped.
[ ]deadstatue
wow...youre all idiots.its not just one disc spinning, its 100. its thick...2.5 inches.wont fit standard drive bays for computers though..big downfall..big plus is that it "capable of combining random access memory and long-term storage." possibly meaning any unused long term storage space in the disc could be used as ram...
[ ]Lolcats
Troll fail.
[ ]labant
Approaching 1 ter. Really? This is 4 years old. Even the Blu-ray version, at 5 ter, is not much considering we have 2 ter hdd out for $150. Nice concept though. Basically a hdd with dvds for platters.
[ ]@GFYM
you are retarded. it is not shopped...technology is there...
[ ]BAHUMBUG
Ok. so you can store the encyclopedia britanica law edition on it 1.2 million times?? so what. WHAT DO YOU NEED THAT MUCH MEMORY FOR ON ONE CD??? so you can store a billion life story's on it just for your 3 year old to find and scratch?? THIS IS BS! How many USELESS votes can I get??????
[ ]Phil E. Drifter
Bahumbug: "WHAT DO YOU NEED THAT MUCH MEMORY FOR ON ONE CD???"
PR0N, YOU MORON!
[ ]jas
in the future people will have flying cars!
[ ]Joseph
First off Where the fuck is my jet pack. And two what is the point of a 1 TB CD? You would need to have a drive that could separate out the layers. A lot more than just a dual layer dvd. Plus you would have to have it as a re-writable for it to act as a RAM Device. We can already use USB Flash drives as Ram using windows Vista or higher but you have a limited life span on the drive because you rewrite to much on a drive and it dies. Biggest problem is How durable is this disk? One scratch its toast. laminated? don't you need heat for that wont it melt those micro-layers making up the CD? Just my thoughts.
[ ]James
http://www.maxell.co.jp/e/release/20100514.html
[ ]Closest thing they have. Same company, same info, different medium.
DonaldW.
Guess someone will come out with a dvd-drive that replaces the hard drive and can be taken with you without the computer.
[ ]