PPPfffftttt ya and they will cost 800$ a peace.
Via: engadget.com
Posted Jul 6th 2007 8:29PM by Donald Melanson
Compared to some of the recent optical disc advances we've seen, 500GB may not seem like all that much, but according to the researchers behind the so-called "Microholas" project, they've found a means to cram that amount onto "regular" HD DVD or Blu-ray discs. The key, it seems, is a new microholographic recording technique that makes use of nanostructures inside the disc to squeeze in as much data as possible. They're apparently not quite satisfied with the results just yet though, saying that they expect the technology to one day let them store a full terabyte of data on a single disc, which they assure us will not be used to "stash away a thousand movies," but instead be used for "secure long-term storage."
PPPfffftttt ya and they will cost 800$ a peace.
$800 for a 500 GB disc, when you can get 2 250 GB Ext.HD's for almost half the price. I have 580 GB on 3 External HD's and it only cost £220 for all of them (@$450).
Blank media prices are stupid, I mean I can get 100 blank DVD's for £15 (yeah 470GB) and 2 blank 8.5GB DVD's for £16 (a sad 17GB).
Ya it pissed me off when i bought 2 Dual layer disks for 30$, but i bought 100 plain DVDs for the same price.
People who buy in bulk are the only people who benefit from buying blank media discs as they get all the mega discounts
That doesn't impress me as much as fitting 60gb on a piece of printer paper!
^lol, thats sad, you would be impressed with only 60gigs......
its horrible that people set their standards so low.
storage astounds me. i love the new flash drive computers that are slowly coming out. they boot in like half a second and obviously access data real fast. plus theyre durable as hell. I dont know why flash storage is different than hard drive storage though.
Well to be fair, I don't think they were thinking of the average consumer when they did this project. I'm pretty sure mass storage on a disc like that is for people who's profession it is to deal with Hi definition television or photos and whatnot. I mean, were it an actual consumer product it would be absolutely ridiculous considering all the better and cheaper ways to do it, but if your a professional and need to carry around alot of hi def media and cant just carry around two external hard drives, I think they made a perfectly viable product.
Or something like that
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