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Pioneer promises 400GB optical discs

8 July 2008 09:04AM
Tags: pioneer | promises | 400gb | optical | discs

Pioneer has developed a 16-layer read-only optical disc which it claims can store 400GB of data..

The per-layer capacity is 25GB, the same as that of a Blu-ray Disc, and the multilayer technology will also be applicable to multilayer recordable discs.

Multi-layered discs have been difficult to develop because 'crosstalk' from adjacent layers and transmission loss mean that getting a stable signal from the disc is often nearly impossible.

Pioneer achieved stability in the playback of recorded signals by employing a wide-range spherical aberration compensator and light-receiving element that can read out weak signals at a high signal-to-noise ratio in the optical pick-up mechanism.

The huge capacity of these discs means that the new technology will be best suited for applications such large volume data archiving, rather than consumer use.

Pioneer will present the details of this research at the International Symposium on Optical Memory and Optical Data Storage 2008 in Hawaii on 13 July.

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Comments (3)

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""The huge capacity of these discs means that the new technology will be best suited for applications such large volume data archiving, rather than consumer use."

Nonsense, I'm looking for a way to backup my homevideos in raw .dv, it really eats up disc space! I'd already need 4 blueray discs and I don't even have a burner for that yet!

As soon as it's available for consumers at consumer prices, it will be taken up.

/Simon
"

Posted by Simon, 9/07/2008 4:51:40 AM

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"I use 3.5" and 2.5" HDDs for backups.
There exist USB/PSU connectors to even allow them to be used raw - without caddies or external boxes, so they can be simply popped back into their bag after backup - very fast, reliable and cheap.

Flash SSDs are very popular and soon we will have new technologies to make them a faster and durable as RAM. Ultimately 'the network' will make personal storage simply an on-line commodity.

So, I have to ask, is it just too late for optical disk technologies? Where do they fit?
"

Posted by Richard Green, 9/07/2008 5:26:02 AM

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"Simon's comment is spot-on. In fact, a year or two ago I read about 500GB optical discs. Consumers are recording and/or producing HD content, and want to store in uncompressed format on archival media."

Posted by Toby Fruth, 9/07/2008 5:42:59 AM

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