http://gadgets.qj.net/50-000GB-DVDs-Could-Wipe-Out-Computer-HDs-HD-DVDs-and-Bluray/pg/49/aid/58535What the fuck will video game developers do from now on, realease entire series at a time.
7/22/2006 1:29:06 PM
for example:the Paramount discall paramount movies ever made on a disc
7/22/2006 1:33:53 PM
Sony will fight this thing like ww2
7/22/2006 11:47:08 PM
are you kidding? the studios would love this you try to pirate a 50TB disc
7/22/2006 11:50:49 PM
I heard these are coming out next week.
7/23/2006 12:02:58 AM
^^ Ahahaha, that would take so fucking long. What's the theoretical maximum transfer rate on SATAII? 3gb/s? So you could read one of those discs in 4.5 hours MAYBE? I don't even want to think about downloading or burning something that large. The only problem would be how make a movie take up that much space.[Edited on July 23, 2006 at 2:09 PM. Reason : ]
7/23/2006 2:08:23 PM
if they had burnable 50TB disks that could hold sooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo much porn
7/23/2006 2:23:47 PM
7/23/2006 2:24:55 PM
^ I'm talking about the time it would take to pirate an entire disc like that. Do note that the "^^" referred to someone talking about how hard it would be to pirate discs of that size.[Edited on July 23, 2006 at 2:31 PM. Reason : ]
7/23/2006 2:29:49 PM
right and what's the point of that argument - just because the size of the disc is larger doesn't necessarily mean that what you put on it takes up more space - you could put a whole season of a tv show on that disc but it'd still take the same amount of time to download that entire season regardless of the media it was stored on....as the quality goes up for media then the bandwidth available will also
7/23/2006 2:34:28 PM
7/23/2006 2:35:56 PM
The process shouldn't be too much different from creating a blu-ray. And, I think sony would take it in the ass from this deal because they just made a new flag-ship product. Yes, tho I can see production industries loving this, buttttt, people will find a way to get around that and probably use it to their advantage
7/23/2006 2:51:02 PM
50 TB might seem like a lot now but 5 or 10 yrs down the road it could easily be nothing special.
7/23/2006 3:31:51 PM
it is possible that i have downloaded/uploaded 50TB of data in my lifetime... maybe lol
7/23/2006 4:21:12 PM
I think the biggest problem with this would be that a scratch would be pretty catastrophic. CDs and DVDs don't store anywhere near this amount of information and they can be compromised pretty easily due to a simple storage accident.
7/23/2006 4:23:06 PM
i've fxped that much easily - but i doubt i've downloaded/uploaded anywhere near it
7/23/2006 6:10:34 PM
7/23/2006 6:15:51 PM
7/23/2006 8:07:12 PM
i bet in my lifetime i've downloaded maybe 1 or 2 tb
7/23/2006 8:15:38 PM
flashFXP?http://www.inicom.net/pages/en.ffxp-home.php
7/23/2006 8:28:31 PM
7/23/2006 8:44:43 PM
LDH
7/24/2006 1:00:29 AM
7/24/2006 5:28:46 AM
7/24/2006 8:59:04 AM
just FYI -- there is a competing technology that is currently on the market from InPhase. Using holographic storage it can store 300GB on a disc the size of a DVD. They are still developing it further and expect to expand the capacity into the terabyte range. It's pretty amazing how it works...check out: http://www.inphase-tech.com/technology/index.htmlThe PDF's at the bottom are pretty cool by the way.
7/24/2006 5:17:43 PM
^ has been around for a while...i distinctly remember reading about it two years ago, when it was a different company
7/24/2006 5:25:07 PM
yeah, they're a spinoff of Lucent Technologies
7/24/2006 6:49:02 PM
every month that goes by, it becomes less and less impressive...they need to get the lead out and start marketing it
7/24/2006 6:54:44 PM