arstechnica.com — Researchers describe a way to combine two hard drive writing methods to store data at densities of up to one terabyte per square inch, and suggest the media could be stable up to ten terabytes per square inch.
May 7, 2010 View in Crawl 4
ridesapalehorseMay 9, 2010
No, YO da byte, Dog!
rockrapdudeMay 9, 2010
This account has been closed by the user
mysticaloneMay 10, 2010
WHEN YOUR POWERS COMBINE, I AM CAPTAIN HARDDRIVE!
atarioMay 12, 2010
You're forgetting HD video. Still takes a lotta space.
atarioMay 12, 2010
It will be a long time before solid state gets anywhere near the $/GB or GB/cm^3 of spinning rust drives. They have a loooong head start.For a long time, systems will be hybrid: SSD for speed plus HDD for mass storage.
atarioMay 12, 2010
It isn't a problem /for you/. Building an HD video library still takes an insane quantity of drives.
apocadallMay 17, 2010
Because Moore's law only has to do with transistors, in which the number of transistors that can be placed inexpensively on an integrated circuit has doubled approximately every two years.
xptoastMay 17, 2010
This account has been closed by the user
cyriakMay 21, 2010
?
andrewtheartMay 25, 2010
Can this method be used on existing hard drives?(Sorry, TLDR)