University team squeezes 500GB onto a single DVD

Blu-ray, HD DVD
Share

Personally, I’m still mildly impressed with the storage of 25GB for a single layer high-def disc, let alone 50GB on a dual-layer disc. But that’s not pushing limits anywhere near as far as they can go – one university team has packed in 500GB onto a single disc.

The University of Berlin, with partners Budapest University of Technology and Economics and Universita Politecnica delle Marche in Italy, has developed a microholographic recording technique, using nanostructures inside the disk rather than on the surface as in conventional optical storage systems. This boosts storage capacity far beyond what’s on offer commercially. And that’s not then end of it – Professor Susanna Orl told German site Pressetext that this could be boosted to one terabyte of data.

The research is for the development of long-term storage. Personally, I’m looking at my film and music collection on a couple of discs.

University website

Via The Register

Related posts
Samsung BDP-UP5000 Blu-ray and HD DVD player gets new release date
Total HD dual-format Blu-ray/HD-DVD discs delayed
Toshiba unveils first HD DVD re-writable drive for notebooks

Dave Walker
For latest tech stories go to TechDigest.tv