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Holographic media promising but 'not ready' for prime time yet

Holographic media promising but 'not ready' for prime time yet

By:  narellano  On: 04 Feb 2007 For: ITWorldCanada.com Creator

Imagine 60 movies, 240 hours of television programming, 1.6 million high-resolution colour photos, or more than 150 million pages of text – all on a single disc with a shelf life of more than 50 years.

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Imagine 60 movies, 240 hours of television programming, 1.6 million high-resolution colour photos, or more than 150 million pages of text – all on a single disc with a shelf life of more than 50 years.

Such capabilities are not gee-wiz fiction, or years down the road.

According to Maxell Canada, they are offered right now by the company's recently launched holographic storage media disc.

"If you want to store a lot of digital data and want it to last, this is the disc for you," said Dennis Tuer, national accounts manager at Concord, Ont.–based Maxell Canada.

He said the five-and-a-half inch disc would be ideal for high-volume data producers such as government agencies, libraries, as well as the entertainment and media industries.

Maxell Holographic optical recording technology – developed in conjunction with InPhase Technologies of Colarado – is designed to overcome the density limits of conventional storage, the company says.

Unlike other technologies that record one data bit at a time, holography allows a million bits of data to be written and read in parallel with a single flash of light – providing significantly higher transfer rates than offered by current optical storage devices.

Maxell and InPhase have already released their first-generation cartridges holding and reading 300GB of data at 160Mbps.

Maxell is developing second- and third- generation cartridges to hold 800GB and 1.6TB of data respectively.

According to the company, the technology is suitable for long-term archival and currently provides enough capacity for live playout of many HD formats.

One Canadian analyst believes that despite its promise, it may be a while before holographic media is ready for prime time.

"The technology is not mature enough to go commercial," according to Curtis Gittens, senior analyst, Info-Tech Research Group Inc. in London, Ont.

Gittens, who wrote a report on holographic media two years ago, said the technology is "viable but still evolving."

For instance, he noted that there are only two companies deeply involved in developing holographic storage media, and no vendor is even marketing a disc drive capable of reading and writing to the discs.

In addition, claims of a long archival life remain untested, the Info-Tech analyst added.

Tuer acknowledged that – while Maxell and InPhase have developed a drive for the disc, and several organizations are currently trying out the device – no other company has developed hardware for the product. "It's sort of a cart before the horse situation," admitted Tuer.


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narellano narellano is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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