Storage Solutions Store 256GB on an A4 sheet!!

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Dark_Knight

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A new technology called "Rainbow Technology" holds great promises for the future... and this has been created by and Indian engineer :hap2:

Files such as text, images, sounds and video clips are encoded in "rainbow format" as coloured circles, triangles, squares and so on, and printed as dense graphics on paper at a density of 2.7GB per square inch. The paper can then be read through a specially developed scanner and the contents decoded into their original digital format and viewed or played. The encoding and decoding processes have not been revealed.

Source : Techworld.com - Applications News - Store 256GB on an A4 sheet
 
This one says 450GB :O ....

Rainbow technology still in the works but holds promise.

According to a report from the Arab News, a university technology student named Sainul Abideen has invented a method of storing massive amounts of digital data on a plain piece of paper that he claims could store many times the capacity of the best Blu-ray or HD-DVD discs. In fact, Abideen says that his Rainbow technology can enable him to store up to 450GB on a piece of paper. As far as a real life demonstration of a 450GB paper goes, the technology still needs development.

Abideen claims that that his Rainbow system is better than a binary storage because instead of using ones and zeros to represent data, Abideen uses geometric shapes such as squares and hexagons to represent data patterns. Color is also used in the system to represent other data elements. According to Abideen, all that's required to read the Rainbow prints is a scanner and specialized software.

The reporter at Arab News claims to have seen 450 pages of fully printed foolscap being stored on a 4-square inch piece of Rainbow paper. The reporter also claimed that he was shown a 45-second video clip that was stored using the Rainbow system on a plain piece of paper. Interestingly, 45-seconds of video isn't a lot, and if the Rainbow system can store up to 450GB, then we need to be watching full length high-definition videos from a piece of paper.

One of the major advantages of the Rainbow system is the fact that it should cost a lot less to produce than typical polycarbonate DVD and CD discs. Abideen claims that huge databanks can be constructed out of Rainbow-based storage mediums. Although the main attraction is cheap paper right now, other media can use the Rainbow system too.

As of right now, Abideen's system is still under research at the Muslim Educational Society Engineering College and although no major companies have expressed interest, Abideen is confident of the system's future. According to the report, Aibdeen is hard at work at developing a Rainbow scanner that would be small enough for integration into notebook computers. If developed, a Rainbow printer will likely be next up.

In other high-capacity storage news, DailyTech previously reported that Hitachi-Maxell is in the progress of producing holographic media for shipment this year. Holographic storage is one of the biggest forward-looking storage technologies and holds a great deal of promise -- as well as data.

DailyTech - Student Develops Paper Capable of 450GB of Storage
 
256GB Paper Storage Claims Simply Don't Add Up

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A story first posted on ArabNews.com has been making the rounds on the Internet, involving an Indian student who has allegedly found a method of storing compressed digital information on a regular sheet of paper. Sainul Abideen claims that his technique, dubbed Rainbow Technology, can store between 90 and 450 GB on a single sheet of paper. The system allegedly works by encoding data into small geometrical shapes (circles, squares, and triangles) in various colors, then printing them out on a piece of paper. A scanner is used to read the data back in to the computer. Abideen claims that his storage method is more environmentally friendly due to the biodegradable nature of paper, and envisions magazine publishers printing tear-out sheets of paper containing demos and programs, replacing the traditional plastic-wrapped CD or DVD. Storing digital information on paper dates back to the earliest days of computing. When I was a little kid, my dad used to bring home punched cards from his job programming a mainframe computer at Vancouver General Hospital. The cards had 80 columns—an artifact that remains with us today as the default width for console-mode applications—and could only store a maximum of 120 bytes (about one-eighth of a kilobyte) per card.

However, despite technological advances in scanning and printing technology since those days, Abideen's claims quite simply do not hold water. A little bit of math is in order here. Starting with a scanner with a maximum resolution of 1,200 dots per inch, this leads to a maximum of 1,440,000 dots per square inch, or just over 134 million dots on a sheet of standard 8.5" by 11" paper (excluding margins). Getting a scanner to accurately pick up the color of a single dot on a page is a difficult affair (it would take near-perfect color calibration, for example, and be prone to errors from ambient light and imperfections in the paper) but let's be generous and say that the scanner can accurately pick out 256 shades of color for each dot. That's a single byte per dot, making the final calculation easy: a maximum theoretical storage of 134MB, which would likely go down to under 100MB after error correction.

It's a decent amount of storage, but several orders of magnitude smaller than the 450GB claimed by Abideen. The claim that "circles, triangles, and squares" can achieve these extra orders of magnitude can be easily challenged. There is a word for using mathematical algorithms to increase the storage space of digital information: it's called compression. No amount of circles and triangles could be better than existing compression algorithms: if it was, those formulas would already be in use! Compression could easily increase the 100MB theoretical paper storage by a factor of two or three, but so could simply compressing the files you wished to store into a .zip archive before converting them to a color printout. Ultimately, storage is about bits, and the smaller the bits are physically, the more storage can be packed into a given space. The magnetic bits on hard drive platters and the tiny pits in optical media are orders of magnitude smaller than the smallest dot that can be recognized by any optical scanner, and this is the simple reason why they store orders of magnitude more information. Even if a much higher-density printer were used (such as an expensive laser printer or offset printing process) the limiting factor is still the scanner required to get the information back into the computer. In the end, a picture may be worth a thousand words, but it cannot be worth half a thousand megabytes.

http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20061126-8288.html
 
why would this be false claim.... I think this can be done... But the cost would be very huge.... Think of a very good quality scanner and printer to get that good precision!!
 
^^There is no printer in the world that can print at the density this dude is claiming he's compressing data to :P. He'd first have to invent a new printer that prints at 9600x9600 to actually pack enough dots onto a sheet of plain paper :P. Now that would be an achievement.
 
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