nbcbayarea.com— A new technique developed by scientists at UC Berkeley and University of Massachusetts Amherst may drastically increase the ability of devices to store things.
Feb 19, 2009View in Crawl 4
Two thoughts:1. I bought the 16gb iPhone and have yet to fill it even halfway. 2. I bought a 1TB external drive and filled it in 4 months due to video editing projects.So, in some ways, I don't care, and in others, I care a lot. But mostly, I share the sentiment of other commentors: price is key, and battery technology is completely under developed.
That means I could listen to my iPod without repeating a song for more than 800 hours.I think I can fit every song and album I ever liked on there.Sure I could give up mp3s and go to Flac and only have 80 hours...
Closed AccountFeb 20, 2009
I didn't fix the math, they stated 10 terabits then that 1 terabit = 125gb I just did some handy dandy multiplication but thanks for the vote
corrosionxFeb 20, 2009
The last iPod you'll ever need.
djphatjiveFeb 20, 2009
OH MY GOD I SCRATCHED IT!!!!! WHERE IS MY 2 TB OF DATA????????
cybersaurFeb 20, 2009
Just in time! Now Microsoft has the proper media for its next flagship OS- Windows 8!
mrtandmrdogFeb 21, 2009
Damn, guess I'll have to buy the White Album again.
ddcool1124Feb 21, 2009
The quote is fake.
oneysealFeb 27, 2009
Two thoughts:1. I bought the 16gb iPhone and have yet to fill it even halfway. 2. I bought a 1TB external drive and filled it in 4 months due to video editing projects.So, in some ways, I don't care, and in others, I care a lot. But mostly, I share the sentiment of other commentors: price is key, and battery technology is completely under developed.
corrosionxMar 11, 2009
That means I could listen to my iPod without repeating a song for more than 800 hours.I think I can fit every song and album I ever liked on there.Sure I could give up mp3s and go to Flac and only have 80 hours...