Could 1TB Optical Disks Be in Your Future?

Mon Jan 7, 2008 12:04PM EST

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While Blu-ray and HD DVD battle over the sub-100GB space and holographic storage companies try to get things going around 300GB, a company called Mempile is working to ship optical discs, the same size as standard DVDs and that will ultimately contain a full terabyte of data.

Mempile, an Israeli company, produces a special (and secret) type of all-plastic disc that forgoes the layer of aluminum in the center that we've become accustomed to. The data is stored right in the plastic, in up to 200 five-micron-thick layers, one on top of each other. The discs are completely transparent, yellow, and mysterious.

Unlike holographic storage technology, Mempile's basic technology is about the same as DVD (both the mechanics of the players/burners and the way discs are encoded), but instead of reading pits on aluminum, lasers focus on the plastic at various levels and interpret the chemical state of that section on the disc.

Mempile plans to ship a prototype burner by the end of 2008, with production beginning in 2009. Initial prices for the burner, targeted at businesses and archival applications, should run about $3,000 to $4,000. Media will initially run $30 to $40 per disc. Prices should fall rapidly; Blu-ray had a similar price drop.

One caveat: For now Mempile's technology is a write-once technology, but Mempile's founder says that could change in the future. Then again, he notes, why would you need to? Very few people even use DVD rewriting technology as it is, and those discs don't even hit 9GB. With 1TB on a single disc, who would need to delete something to get more space?

Comments on Could 1TB Optical Disks Be in Your Future?

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  • 1 Posted by rogueist on Mon Jan 7, 2008 12:48PM EST Report Abuse

    WOW - I only need about 200 or 300 of these discs to store all the data I actually have! Awesome!

  • 2 Posted by dizzneeguy on Mon Jan 7, 2008 1:15PM EST Report Abuse

    Rogueist - how in the H-E double hockey sticks could you possibly have 200-300 TERABYTES of data to store? Are you archiving the National Archives in your basement or something?

  • 3 Posted by matt_archbold2002 on Mon Jan 7, 2008 1:22PM EST Report Abuse

    rogueist- are you saying that you have somewhere in the neighborhood of 300 Terabytes of data????????????????? What could you possibly have that requires that much data????????????????????????????????????????? This technology sounds cool. The price is a little hard to stomach right now, but that will just take time.

  • 4 Posted by muscogeekid on Mon Jan 7, 2008 1:55PM EST Report Abuse

    Was this actually demonstrated at CES? For some reason, it has the feel of vaporware.

  • 5 Posted by muscogeekid on Mon Jan 7, 2008 1:56PM EST Report Abuse

    Was this actually demonstrated at CES? For some reason, it has the feel of vaporware.

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