Subscribe to Windows IT Pro

 

Get Newsletters

  • Get the Latest News
  • Product Updates
  • Helpful Tricks
  • Productivity Tips

Subscribe Now!

October 01, 2004 12:00 AM

One-Terabyte Optical Disk Technology Unveiled

Windows IT Pro
InstantDoc ID #44081
Rating: (0)

At the Asia-Pacific Data Store Conference 2004 in Taiwan last week, a group of researchers from Imperial College London unveiled new technology that has the potential to store up to 1TB of data on a disc the size of a CD or DVD. Although the new technology, called Multiplexed Optical Data Storage (MODS), is 5 to 10 years from commercial implementation, researchers tout the advance as important for consumer applications such as video and mobile devices and for enterprise applications such as data storage and backup.

The race to add more capacity to optical storage than the current DVD format provides is on, with High-Definition DVD (HD-DVD) and Blu-ray formats battling for supremacy. Like DVDs, CDs, and Blu-ray, MODS uses lasers, but improves on them by using subtle variations and hundreds of angles while reading data from the disc. Like other disc formats, the technology will use two layers and both sides of a disc. "According to our experimental results, we can optimistically estimate that we will be able to store about 1TB per disk in total using our new method. This translates to about 250GB per layer, 10 times the amount that a Blu-ray disk can hold," said Dr. Peter Török, leader of the research at Imperial College.

The researchers believe MODS discs will cost about the same to manufacture as today's DVDs. The transition to MODS will be eased by its ability to read CDs and DVDs. The researchers see one of the more powerful uses of its technology in the mobile device market because companies will be able to manufacture small-form-factor discs that can hold significantly more data than other available options. The group hopes to secure additional funding for future development and have the first MODS-based technology on the shelves between 2010 and 2015.

Related Content:

ARTICLE TOOLS

Comments
    There are no comments to display. Be the first one!
You must log on before posting a comment.

Are you a new visitor? Register Here

advertisement

advertisement

White Papers

Get your Windows 7 deployment off to the right start by implementing PC lockdown. A locked-down environment is easier and cheaper to support since users are less likely to make unnecessary changes to the core system configuration - read more here!

Essential Guides

Is your iSCSI "lossy"? The reality is that most off-the-shelf Ethernet hardware deployed for iSCSI can lose packets, resulting in slow performance or application downtime. Learn how to assess your current iSCSI infrastructure and engineer an advanced iSCSI SAN infrastructure.

Web Seminars

What's the best way to keep your network safe from malware? In this web seminar, security expert Greg Shields suggests an alternative method to the traditional blacklisting approach that is common with anti-virus and anti-malware solutions.

eLearning Series

We bring the experts direct to you to share their real-world perspective and expertise. During each event, three sessions stream in real time, so you can learn, ask questions, and get solutions.
Upcoming event: Getting the Most with Exchange 2010 with Paul Robichaux

Subscribe to Windows IT Pro!

Windows is a trademark of the Microsoft group of companies. Windows IT Pro is used by Penton Media Inc. under license from owner.