Holographic storage: the 500GB business card

By Rafe Needleman, CNET.com on 05 January 2006

Tags: ces | consumer | electronic | holographic | storage | beam | laser | medium | card | 500gb

Blu-ray discs are supposed to store 25GB. HD-DVD may stretch up to 45GB. Big deal. The next new storage medium, holographic storage, may be able to cram 300GB onto one inexpensive disk.

In holographic storage, a laser beam is split by a mirror. One of the split beams has data encoded into it. The two beams are then recombined in a medium that records their interference pattern. This pattern can be read back and decoded into the original data. Since data is literally encoded in beams of light and in three dimensions, data densities are incredibly high.

The challenge is finding a recording medium for the beams that is stable, fast to read to and write from, and inexpensive. InPhase Technologies, a spin-off from Bell Labs, has the magic polymer and is bringing it to market this year.



How holographic storage works. Courtesy of InPhase.

The first products will be commercial archival storage cartridges that will hold 300GB. By 2008, capacity should be at 800GB.

InPhase is hoping that its first consumer product will be a postage stamp-size card that holds from 4GB to 8GB (no customers for this product have been announced yet). After that, a business card-size piece of film could be produced that holds 500GB.

These card-based holographic storage units should be cheap to produce and operate under low power, since they don't have to spin the media like a magnetic or optical disk does (they use tiny mirrors, instead, to modulate the laser). The drives use standard CD-class lasers, too, which are available in abundance.

It's unlikely this technology will supplant magnetic disks soon, but for offline media, holographic technology might be the next evolution of storage.

For the complete round up of stories from CES 2006, click here.

Like this article? Click below to send it to your mobile for free!

allenface
15/12/2007 11:36 PM

Massive video storage and retrieval at up to 160mbs? Could this be the panacea we've been waiting for relative to HD acquisition?

Report offensive content

MUZZAG2K6INDAMIX
09/01/2008 08:58 PM

this is well gid mun!

Report offensive content

  • Leave a comment

All fields marked with * are required

What do you think

Your e-mail will not be displayed

You must read and type the 6 chars within 0..9 and A..F

You must read and type the 6 chars.


  • Australia's giant e-waste recycling centre: Photos

  • Top portable storage devices

  • Top NAS Units

  • WD ShareSpace

  • Iomega StorCenter ix2 (1TB)

  • Intel Core i7-965 Extreme Edition

  • Seagate FreeAgent Xtreme 1TB

  • Seagate FreeAgent Go Portable Drive 320GB

  • Corsair Flash Voyager 64GB

More articles »

Find the right desktop

Brand
  • Multiple options can be selected

    • WD ShareSpace

      WD ShareSpace

      The WD ShareSpace NAS is a step up from the company's World Edition and while it performs well it's expensive and offers few features.

    • Iomega StorCenter ix2 (1TB)

      Iomega StorCenter ix2 (1TB)

      The Iomega StorCenter ix2 is a two-drive NAS device that offers Bluetooth support but no remote access via the web.

    • Seagate FreeAgent Xtreme 1TB

      Seagate FreeAgent Xtreme 1TB

      Seagate's Xtreme has some extremely good speeds, but it's also extremely ordinary to look at.

    • Seagate FreeAgent Go Portable Drive 320GB

      Seagate FreeAgent Go Portable Drive 320GB

      Seagate's updated FreeAgent Go is slim, attractive and offers a good mix of features and speed.

    • Corsair Flash Voyager 64GB

      Corsair Flash Voyager 64GB

      With more than enough space, some will be using Corsair's 64GB as a replacement for an external hard drive. Transferring this much data though will leave you wishing for more speed.

    More reviews »

    Membership benefits

    Win prizes and other promotion benefits

    Win prizes and other promotion benefits

    As a CNET Australia member, you're eligible to enter and win any prizes on our site. Sign up for a free CNET Australia membership now!