Author Topic: The Future Succesor to BLU-RAY, what Playstation 5 might use !!!  (Read 439 times)

Dr. Octagon

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HDSS (Holographic Data Storage System)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HDSS
http://computer.howstuffworks.com/holographic-memory.htm


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Holographic memory offers the possibility of storing 1 terabyte (TB) of data in a sugar-cube-sized crystal. A terabyte of data equals 1,000 gigabytes, 1 million megabytes or 1 trillion bytes. Data from more than 1,000 CDs could fit on a holographic memory system. Most computer hard drives only hold 10 to 40 GB of data, a small fraction of what a holographic memory system might hold.

Polaroid scientist Pieter J. van Heerden first proposed the idea of holographic (three-dimensional) storage in the early 1960s. A decade later, scientists at RCA Laboratories demonstrated the technology by recording 500 holograms in an iron-doped lithium-niobate crystal, and 550 holograms of high-resolution images in a light-sensitive polymer material. The lack of cheap parts and the advancement of magnetic and semiconductor memories placed the development of holographic data storage on hold.

Over the past decade, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) and high-tech giants IBM and Lucent's Bell Labs have led the resurgence of holographic memory development.


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In a holographic memory device, a laser beam is split in two, and the two resulting beams interact in a crystal medium to store a holographic recreation of a page of data.


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The Basics
Prototypes developed by Lucent and IBM differ slightly, but most holographic data storage systems (HDSS) are based on the same concept. Here are the basic components that are needed to construct an HDSS:

    * Blue-green argon laser
    * Beam splitters to spilt the laser beam
    * Mirrors to direct the laser beams
    * LCD panel (spatial light modulator)
    * Lenses to focus the laser beams
    * Lithium-niobate crystal or photopolymer
    * Charge-coupled device (CCD) camera

When the blue-green argon laser is fired, a beam splitter creates two beams. One beam, called the object or signal beam, will go straight, bounce off one mirror and travel through a spatial-light modulator (SLM). An SLM is a liquid crystal display (LCD) that shows pages of raw binary data as clear and dark boxes. The information from the page of binary code is carried by the signal beam around to the light-sensitive lithium-niobate crystal. Some systems use a photopolymer in place of the crystal. A second beam, called the reference beam, shoots out the side of the beam splitter and takes a separate path to the crystal. When the two beams meet, the interference pattern that is created stores the data carried by the signal beam in a specific area in the crystal -- the data is stored as a hologram.

An advantage of a holographic memory system is that an entire page of data can be retrieved quickly and at one time. In order to retrieve and reconstruct the holographic page of data stored in the crystal, the reference beam is shined into the crystal at exactly the same angle at which it entered to store that page of data. Each page of data is stored in a different area of the crystal, based on the angle at which the reference beam strikes it. During reconstruction, the beam will be diffracted by the crystal to allow the recreation of the original page that was stored. This reconstructed page is then projected onto the charge-coupled device (CCD) camera, which interprets and forwards the digital information to a computer.

The key component of any holographic data storage system is the angle at which the second reference beam is fired at the crystal to retrieve a page of data. It must match the original reference beam angle exactly. A difference of just a thousandth of a millimeter will result in failure to retrieve that page of data.


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Desktop Holographic Data Storage
After more than 30 years of research and development, a desktop holographic storage system (HDSS) is close at hand. Early holographic data storage devices will have capacities of 125 GB and transfer rates of about 40 MB per second. Eventually, these devices could have storage capacities of 1 TB and data rates of more than 1 GB per second -- fast enough to transfer an entire DVD movie in 30 seconds. So why has it taken so long to develop an HDSS, and what is there left to do?

When the idea of an HDSS was first proposed, the components for constructing such a device were much larger and more expensive. For example, a laser for such a system in the 1960s would have been 6 feet long. Now, with the development of consumer electronics, a laser similar to those used in CD players could be used for the HDSS. LCDs weren't even developed until 1968, and the first ones were very expensive. Today, LCDs are much cheaper and more complex than those developed 30 years ago. Additionally, a CCD sensor wasn't available until the last decade. Almost the entire HDSS device can now be made from off-the-shelf components, which means that it could be mass-produced.

Although HDSS components are easier to come by today than they were in the 1960s, there are still some technical problems that need to be worked out. For example, if too many pages are stored in one crystal, the strength of each hologram is diminished. If there are too many holograms stored on a crystal, and the reference laser used to retrieve a hologram is not shined at the precise angle, a hologram will pick up a lot of background from the other holograms stored around it. It is also a challenge to align all of these components in a low-cost system.

Researchers are confident that technologies will be developed in the next two or three years to meet these challenges. With such technologies on the market, you will be able to purchase the first holographic memory players by the time "Star Wars: Episode II" is released on home 3-D discs. This DVD-like disc would have a capacity 27 times greater than the 4.7-GB DVDs available today, and the playing device would have data rates 25 times faster than today's fastest DVD players.




Since it involves no moving parts, holographic data storage will be far more reliable than existing hard disk technologies. IBM has already demonstrated the possibility of holding 1 TB of data in a crystal the size of a sugar cube and of data access rates of one trillion bits per second. The major challenge ahead is expected to be the development of a rewritable form of holographic storage.

During CES 2006, a workable holographic drive was tested and stored 300 GB of memory compared to blu-ray's 100 GB. It has been announced that hologram disks will be a post-blu-ray storage device.
« Last Edit: January 07, 2008, 08:46:56 AM by 730 DIPS »
 

Don Jacob

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Re: The Future Succesor to BLU-RAY, what Playstation 5 might use !!!
« Reply #1 on: January 08, 2008, 01:18:27 PM »
how long you think before this technology comes out on the mass market?


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Teddy Roosevelt

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Re: The Future Succesor to BLU-RAY, what Playstation 5 might use !!!
« Reply #2 on: January 08, 2008, 01:20:09 PM »
VHS is going to make a comeback.
 

Now_Im_Not_Banned

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Re: The Future Succesor to BLU-RAY, what Playstation 5 might use !!!
« Reply #3 on: January 08, 2008, 02:03:03 PM »
VHS is going to make a comeback.


VHS was the shit.
 

Dr. Octagon

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Re: The Future Succesor to BLU-RAY, what Playstation 5 might use !!!
« Reply #4 on: January 08, 2008, 10:51:18 PM »
how long you think before this technology comes out on the mass market?

Not sure how much it cost to produce.
Maybe 2015 for mass production.

This is gonna be great for DVR, can't see much for personal use right now.
 

Don Jacob

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Re: The Future Succesor to BLU-RAY, what Playstation 5 might use !!!
« Reply #5 on: January 09, 2008, 01:23:42 AM »
VHS is going to make a comeback.


VHS was the shit.

fuck no!

we always got a god damn vcr that kept chewing up the tapes and shit. no amtter what the brand; sony, panasonic, samsung, hitachi, dae wu, tru tech, they all did that shit.


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WC Iz Active

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Re: The Future Succesor to BLU-RAY, what Playstation 5 might use !!!
« Reply #6 on: January 09, 2008, 01:30:03 AM »
wtf?  i thought it was going to be at least 15 years before something better than blu-ray hit the market. this thread might be talking 15-20 years down the road, who knows.

 

K.Dub

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Re: The Future Succesor to BLU-RAY, what Playstation 5 might use !!!
« Reply #7 on: January 09, 2008, 05:15:20 AM »
Damn, Kain is ahead of his time..

We'll see

kemizt
 

Dr. Octagon

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Re: The Future Succesor to BLU-RAY, what Playstation 5 might use !!!
« Reply #8 on: January 09, 2008, 11:44:50 AM »
wtf?  i thought it was going to be at least 15 years before something better than blu-ray hit the market. this thread might be talking 15-20 years down the road, who knows.

I'm thinking they're gonna use both technology together. Maybe HDSS as the hard drive at first (2015) before blu-ray becomes obsolete.
 

Now_Im_Not_Banned

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Re: The Future Succesor to BLU-RAY, what Playstation 5 might use !!!
« Reply #9 on: January 09, 2008, 02:53:47 PM »
VHS is going to make a comeback.


VHS was the shit.

fuck no!

we always got a god damn vcr that kept chewing up the tapes and shit. no amtter what the brand; sony, panasonic, samsung, hitachi, dae wu, tru tech, they all did that shit.


Must be some Bakersfield shit.
 

Turf Hitta

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Re: The Future Succesor to BLU-RAY, what Playstation 5 might use !!!
« Reply #10 on: January 15, 2008, 07:33:50 PM »
VHS is going to make a comeback.

BETA MAX FO LIFE NIGGA WHAT IS IT!!!!!!!!!!!
 

Kill

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Re: The Future Succesor to BLU-RAY, what Playstation 5 might use !!!
« Reply #11 on: January 16, 2008, 07:39:34 AM »
things just go too damn fast. Blu Ray's just (as good as) out of a format war and starting to sell a bit and here comes the technology to make it obsolete :D

but of course this is gonna take some time....
 

ToOoOoN!!!

Re: The Future Succesor to BLU-RAY, what Playstation 5 might use !!!
« Reply #12 on: January 16, 2008, 06:02:56 PM »
VHS is going to make a comeback.

BETA MAX FO LIFE NIGGA WHAT IS IT!!!!!!!!!!!

lolol +1
 

big mat

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Re: The Future Succesor to BLU-RAY, what Playstation 5 might use !!!
« Reply #13 on: January 17, 2008, 09:59:18 PM »
fuck a support