9/15/2006 10:24:10 AM
9/15/2006 10:26:11 AM
what are you so about?
9/15/2006 10:31:13 AM
wow, that level of storage per disc is insane. imagine having something like the entire Library of Congress on one CD, next to a PDF copy every unclassified government document ever produced in the history of the country, with a few gigs left over for whatever else...and then of course there's all the stuff that could get packed onto video game CDs/DVDs [Edited on September 15, 2006 at 10:58 AM. Reason : l33t]
9/15/2006 10:55:12 AM
^ Dude, you forgot the pr0n.
9/15/2006 11:03:08 AM
My guess, 5-10 years before it hits the home-consumer market. By that point, hard drives will most likely have increased enough in size that the technology will just be "catching up".
9/15/2006 1:19:50 PM
^that's pretty unlikely.the latest breakthrough in hard drive tech is perpendicular recording, which is nice + all and makes for higher capacity, but nowhere near the level that this would offer.I wonder how much space all the pr0n on the interweb would take up.
9/15/2006 1:53:34 PM
9/15/2006 3:19:08 PM
when was the last time you saw a holodisc for sale? at least perpendicular recording comes relatively cheaply on seagate drivesi imagine this is just like every other advancement...we hear about it now, forget about in a week and NEVER HEAR ABOUT IT AGAIN, just like holodiscs
9/15/2006 3:44:23 PM
9/15/2006 5:00:19 PM
This technology could help make holo-recording a reality. There are (is?) prototype holocube drives, but they are gigantic.
9/15/2006 5:21:03 PM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hard_disk#1990sFun reading on a Friday night. Check out the Seagate's research into nanotube-lubricated HDDs. 7.5 terrabytes in a 3.5" drive they are estimating.
9/15/2006 10:04:18 PM
THINK OF THE PORNO
9/16/2006 3:17:30 PM
i wonder how much porno has ever been created, in TB
9/16/2006 3:22:35 PM