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Scientists developed a 200TB optical disc in a new technology breakthrough


We love 4K Blu-rays, but scientists are on the verge of a breakthrough for optical media: A research team from Shanghai just published a research paper on Nature that explains how we can use “3D nanoscale” storage to store 200,000GB (200TB or 1.6 petabytes) on one disc.

The technology uses a light-sensitive material called AIE-DDPR and two different optical lasers — one blue laser with a 480nm wavelength and one orange laser with a 592nm wavelength — to read the data stored on the disc. Writing data to the disc requires a green 515-nanometer laser as well as a red 639-nm laser.

While traditional storage techniques use two dimensions, the new optical technology uses three and can have up to 100 layers that could be read — that equates to a 4,000-fold increase over the 3-layer, 100GB limit that Blu-ray discs currently have.

Best of all, the scientists say that current disc fabrication plants could be used for the new technology, and a blank disc could be created in around six minutes.



Absolutely nuts. One disc to save all your porn!
 

jshackles

Gentlemen, we can rebuild it. We have the capability to make the world's first enhanced store. Steam will be that store. Better than it was before.
Neat, I'm sure they'll be available commercially in about 15 years
 
Just making a weak science COVID joke.


Also science sucks. I am going back to sorcery and alchemy.

Nah I'm a big fan of science just not the science that SJWs and Feminazis and whatever science the far religious right promote

But this is getting off topic

As for this news article, I'm hoping they are able to be make DVD/BLURAY/HOLO/Carts that can hold more than 200 TB in the future.

I'm not a fan of all digital/steaming Future they are trying to push on us
 
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AJUMP23

Member
Nah I'm a big fan of science just not the science that SJWs and Feminazis and whatever science the far religious right promote

But this is getting off topic

As for this news article, I'm hoping they are able to be make DVD/BLURAY/HOLO/Carts that can hold more than 200 TB in the future.

I'm not a fan of all digital/steaming Future they are trying to push on us
I am actually excited about this super dense storage.
 
We are nerds.

Yes we are

Mike D Nerds GIF by Beastie Boys


I'm just thinking what technology will look like 20 years from now
 
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*scratch*
50TB disappears

This is why I'm hoping Cart storage sizes increases in the future where they are cheap to produce

Like a Switch Cartridge that holds 200 to 400 TB but knowing how slow the progress on that cart technology is I would expect that to happen in at least 40 years unless some big breakthrough comes out that makes it possible in 20 years lol
 
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If manufacturing is anything like DVD and blu-ray, then anything after 3-4 layers probably isnt viable since yields dramatically go down after each layer.
 

Husky

THE Prey 2 fanatic
I really fucking hope this turns out to be legit. I'd love to have better-than-DCP-quality films playable in home theaters. What would this technology mean for internal storage?
 

Kadve

Member
Still waiting for the Holographic Versatile Disc to come to market, 6TB of storage.
Was about to say the same. Read/Write time on optical media is too slow for consumers nowadays. And i doubt proffesional applications are gonna adopt these either when 300TB+ Magnetic tape cartridges already exists.



Still. With HDD's seemingly flatlininig at around 8TB and SSD's still being way expensive at those sizes. Would be nice to have something like that.
 
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YCoCg

Member
Remember when Blu-ray was going to allow entire series on one disc!? Pepperidge Farm remembers.
What quality are we talking? How long of a show? For example, sticking to DVD quality then you could fit all of the great series of Red Dwarf (Series 1-6) on a dual layer 50GB Blu-ray.
 
I'd be curious to see how much they estimate the cost of one of these discs to be at this point. I'm guessing $1000 per TB.

I find it interesting seeing the costs come down over time for storage media.
 
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