Storage Solutions 1.2 PB (yes, petabyte) hard drives in 4 to 5 years

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iml3g3nd

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US inventor Michael Thomas, owner of Colossal Storage, hopes to achieve exactly that. He says he's the first person to solve non-contact optical spintronics which will in turn utlimately result in the creation of 3.5-inch discs with a million times the capacity of any hard drive - 1.2 petabytes of storage, to be exact.

To put that into perspective, mega is 1,024 times kilo, giga is 1,024 times mega, tera is 1,024 times giga and peta is 1,024 times tera.

Back in May, 2004, we wrote, "Electrons' electro magnetic properties cause an interesting effect that you depend on. Absolutely. It's called electricity and electric current is measured by the abundance, or lack, of electrons in the ferroelectric nucleus, better known as voltage or static charge. Ferroelectric spintronics is, in turn, the method by which electric fields and photons change the properties of ferroelectric molecules."

In the past, data storage has only been able to orient the direction a field of electrons as they move around a molecule, Thomas told p2pnet. "But now there's a way to rotate or spin the individual electrons that make up, or surround, the molecule," he says.

"Normally all the electrons could spin randomly working against the best electrical signal. The electrons are also capable of spinning in both directions a once. But my unique method for creating uniform in-sync spinning electrons will for the first time allow a whole new field of science and electronics to emerge.

"With the ability to control electron spin we will see much smaller electronic devices on the market."

An analogy would be our solar system with all the planets circling the Sun in a clockwise direction. Spintronics would add spin to the planets and their moons in a determined direction as they rotated around the sun.

"One field under study is optical spintronics following Faradays laws," Thomas continues. "The potential data capacity is enormous, and there'd be a very high data transfer rate. Consequently, there'd be no need for expensive compression software like MPEG and others, and no need to backup data."

The goal of spintronics is to generate a perfect spin current using an electric field and UV photons in a high-k dipole dielectric material like a ferroelectric molecule, says Thomas, going on:

"It was important for the material to be a bianry dipole that could then be made reversible, have non-dissipative of power, and not suffer from leakage current lost over time."

What would this mean to you? It would allow the manufacture of double sided disks made by separating the ferroelectric molecular coating layers by a plastic, metal, glass, or ceramic substrate.

And how would this allow you to store immense amounts of data on the discs?

"I'm convinced intraband / outerband resonant absorption by circularly polarized UV photons leads to spin polarization of electrons and, that it's possible to create an 'Atomic Quantum Switch' which carries an electro-static field, electro-magnetic field, and spin orientation," he said.

"And that can be made to represent non-volatile 0's and 1's."

Thomas' agent in Japan is in talks with "several big name companies," he states, saying he expects it'll be two to three years before prototypes will be built.

"I'd say we can expect a finished product to be on the market in about four to five years," he says, adding the cost would probably be in the range of $750 each.

Thomas is a 30-year pioneer whose projects include a computer with a 3D display, instant response, able to run every available OS and application simultaneously, virtually no power consumption or moving parts and complete security - and whose physical component is about the size of a pack of playing cards.
http://www.p2pnet.net/story/7929
 
:| when that arrives well have enough media to fill that too..:rofl:.. but indeed its a breakthrough...
 
SoMxNemesis said:
:| when that arrives well have enough media to fill that too..:rofl:.. but indeed its a breakthrough...

But god forbid if it goes kaput.... :rofl:

All that data gone in one go.... :S :S
 
I still remember when i bought my first comp....it came with a mammoth 4GB HDD.....and see how the days have changed.......Petabyte HDD....my gawd....:D
 
We will require Three of these to make back up of the first one .

wow!These companies are going the right way .
 
^nice idea. :D

racy1 said:
But god forbid if it goes kaput.... :rofl:

All that data gone in one go.... :S :S

blu-ray backups :D or maybe there will be some green-ray or black-ray or whatever with 1tb storage on single disc. :O
 
viralbug said:
^nice idea. :D

blu-ray backups :D or maybe there will be some green-ray or black-ray or whatever with 1tb storage on single disc. :O

I'm sure that will more the expensive than the drive itself .Like right I use one drive for keeping backup up .of other drives .
 
OMG!! i cant imagine a failed 1.2 PB drive!!:no:

Did u know that the SD HC cards can theoretically hold upto 2TB!!!:S

but the SD card association has officially set the limit to 32GB:S

SDHC

8 GB SDHC cards

SDHC (Secure Digital High Capacity, SD 2.0) is an extension of the SD standard that appeared in June 2006.[14] SDHC allows standard-compliant capacities in excess of 2 GB. SDHC cards are often formatted with the FAT32 file system.[15] It uses the same physical and electrical form factor as SD, but the SD 2.0 standard in SDHC uses a different memory addressing method (sector addressing vs byte addressing), thus theoretically reaching a maximum capacity of up to 2 TB (2048 GB). Currently the SD Card association has artificially defined the maximum limit of SDHC capacity to 32 GB[16], however the SD card specification states that "SD Memory Cards with a capacity greater than 32 GB will be available with updated versions of [the specification]."[17] SDHC cards work only in SDHC compatible devices, but standard SD cards work in both SD and SDHC devices. The SDHC trademark is licensed to ensure compatibility.[18]

source - Secure Digital card - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Whoa!! they are arriving soon!!

SDXC

The Secure Digital Extended Capacity (SDXC) format was unveiled at CES 2009. The maximum capacity defined for SDXC cards is 2 TB (2048 GB). SDHC cards also have a maximum capacity of 2 TB based on the card data structures, but this is arbitrarily limited to 32 GB by the SD 2.0 document.

The maximum transfer rate of SDXC was announced as 104 MB/s, with plans to increase it to 300 MB/s in the future OMFG!!!. The SDXC specification has selected Microsoft's proprietary exFAT file system as the standard for this memory card format;[22][23][24] however, as with SDHC and SD, it is possible to use another filesystem such as FAT32 or ext2.

On January 8, 2009, Panasonic announced plans for production of 64 GB SDXC cards.[25]

On March, 6, 2009, Pretec introduces world's first SDXC card [26] with a capacity of 32 GB and a read/write speed of 50 MB/s. At the introduction there were no products compatible with the new memory card.

Man! buy a couple of these and u wont need a SSD!! :D
 
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