PDA

View Full Version : New optical storage technology - 87 GB on a DVD-size disk


The Edge
15th November 2002, 20:21
Just a quickie.
Can be found @ ww*.cdfreaks.com/news2.php3?ID=5136




"jsl used our newssubmit to tell us that a research team of the University of Boston has found a way to store 87 GB of data on a disc the size of a DVD. The large capacity is possible due a new technology that changes the transparency of chemicals instead of the pits and lands that are currently read by a laser on a CD/DVD.

How it exactly is possible, still remains a secret. 87GB of data would enable even better resolution for movies, better sound and of course more space for backups. It is not known when the technology will be available to the general public.


This all began when we were trying to do something completely different with the materials," said John Fourkas, a chemistry professor who led the research at Boston College's Eugene F. Merkert Chemistry Center. "It was by accident." The researchers used a laser set at a specific intensity and focal range to write information digitally in layers by causing a chemical change in the material.

When the same laser was set at a lower intensity and fired at the same area, the material gave off a fluorescent glow indicating readable data was present. Lasers used on standard DVDs and compact discs read pits either engraved on the surface by another laser or stamped in mass production.

With the Fourkas-led team's discovery, in the area known as 3D optical-data storage, the changed material is transparent when not hit directly by the lower-intensity laser. That lets the laser focus on different levels in the material to write and read digital data, Fourkas said. So, far, researchers have been able to write data on as many as 25 levels, he said in an interview.

"We don't yet know how this happens, exactly," Fourkas said. The materials that the team used are stable, and the data don't degrade after repeated readings by the low-intensity laser.



Currently the technology is expensive and it seems that it will take some time before this will be used for mass production. Till then we will have to work with the blu-ray technology I guess."


Hope it is ok to post it like this.
Edge

MfA
15th November 2002, 21:26
As someone on Slashdot pointed out, this is awfully simular to what Constellation-3D was promising ...

markrb
16th November 2002, 08:19
Currently the technology is expensive and it seems that it will take some time before this will be used for mass production. Till then we will have to work with the blu-ray technology I guess."

Oh well only 50GB per platter. I guess we will just have to get by somehow. :)

I am sure technology will continue to march on. Right now Blue laser products have already shown up as pre, pre, pre-production units. I think it was Sony that showed one at a conference a few weeks ago. Still some time away from market, but with Hi-Def mandated by 2007 in the States we will need a higher capacity format to keep up with the picture quality. Imagine if DVD's looked worse then broadcast for the average person.

As a side note there is no University of Boston. It's either Boston College or Boston University. These are two seperate schools and highly competative as well. Both are super expensive averaging around $30,000 a year with room and board.
I am not sure but it seems Eurpeans use University for all higher education. Here we have both colleges and Universities. I don't know if there is any technical difference between them.

Mark

Arky
21st November 2002, 20:12
Originally posted by markrb

I am not sure but it seems Europeans use University for all higher education. Here we have both colleges and Universities. I don't know if there is any technical difference between them.

Mark

Well it depends what you mean by "Higher Education"

I have a Higher National Diploma (HND) which I got at a technical college (2yrs), but I had to go to university to get my degree (3yrs). Strictly-speaking, I suppose they are both Higher Education, but others may beg to differ. Interestingly, I had the option to upgrade the HND to a degree, also, but this option was only available by doing a final third year at an affiliated university campus.

A few years ago, in the UK, at least, virtually all the 'Polytechnics' were merged with. or changed into, universities. This is more of a political than an educational distinction, but it does mean that the old polytechnics are now more able to compete for private-sector/commercial funding or research contracts.


ANYWAY, I digress - I look forward to the newer, higher-capacity, storage mediums, but you can bet your life that by the time the 87gig variable-transparency technology becomes commercially-viable, there will be plenty of other people (Toshiba etc) who will have competing technologies in their R&D arsenals. In the end, the consumer will suffer the format wars again, and again, and again... CORPORATIONS - don't you just Luv 'em? :rolleyes:


Arky ;o)