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Stored Data to Exceed 1.8 Zettabytes by 2011
Posted by
CmdrTaco
on Wed Mar 12, 2008 07:44 AM
from the less-than-eighty-percent-porn dept.
from the less-than-eighty-percent-porn dept.
jcatcw writes "By 2011, there will be 1.8 zettabytes of electronic data stored in 20 quadrillion files, packets or other containers because of, among other things, the massive growth rate of social networks, and digital equipment such as cameras, cell phones and televisions, according to
a new study by IDC. Data is growing by a factor of 10 every five years. According to John Gantz, IDC's lead analyst, "at some point in the life of every file, or bit or packet, 85% of that information somewhere goes through a corporate computer, website, network or asset," meaning any given corporation becomes responsible for protecting large amounts of data that it and its customers may not have created. The study, which coincided with the launch of a "
digital footprint" calculator, also found that as the world changes over to digital televisions, analog sets and obsolete set-top boxes and DVDs "will be heaped on the waste piles, which will double by 2011.""
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That is a lot of... (Score:5, Funny)
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And that DVD is really only used once and then forgotten about.
Re:That is a lot of... (Score:5, Informative)
Parent
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Re:That is a lot of... (Score:4, Funny)
Parent
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Re:That is a lot of... (Score:5, Interesting)
# Upwards of 450,000 servers ranging from a 533 MHz Intel Celeron to a dual 1.4 GHz Intel Pentium III (as of 2005)
# One or more 80GB hard disks per server (2003)
So at least using these numbers, let's say on average they have 120gb per server (1 and a half, 80 GB drives...) That would mean they have 54,000 TBs or 54 PBs. I'm sure they have even more now, but as a point of reference! Yes, Google has a finite amount of space!
Parent
Riiight (Score:3, Insightful)
That's what I plan on doing. I'm going to throw out all my DVDs and buy the Blu-Ray equivalent.
Or maybe I'll just keep the DVDs (and the player) and buy whatever cable adapters I need to get them working on these newfangled devices.
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Re:Riiight (Score:5, Insightful)
DRM? Who cares. I'm not planning on copying 20gb+ disks.
Parent
Re:Riiight (Score:5, Insightful)
There is a world of difference between 1080p and DVD quality - but you'll never see it if your TV can't natively display 1080p (or at least 720) or you use a composite video interconnect rather than HDMI/DVI or component (yes, I know, but you'd be surprised how many people still do...)
Whilst I can imagine that a true 1080p picture might look similar to upscaled DVD on a small screen (which necessarily has very small dot pitch), the difference becomes clear as you scale up the screen beyond 30 inches or so (and bleeding obvious once you get beyond 42"). Interpolation and post-processing can only get you so far. Notwithstanding CSI, even high-end upscaling cannot create genuine detail that didn't exist in the original image - and the more post-processing you do, the more artifacts you are going to see.
I've been running a Pioneer BR player via HDMI to a 1080p 60" plasma for 6 months and whilst upscaled DVD is nice, it can't hold a candle to the 1080 BR picture. Double blind test anyone on a similar system and there's no way you'd get anything but a 100% success rate of identifying HD BR vs upscaled DVD.
Parent
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When you download a 5Gb Blue-Ray Rip it will look much better than a 1Gb DVD rip if you play it on the right equipment. The right equipment being a display to do it justice, and mplayer to do the upscaling nicely
Seriously though, on reading your post I'm shocked by just how much hassle everything is using legal components. We got our TV cheaply as it wasn't "HD-Ready". Apart from the lack of sticker it does do 1280x1024 s
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I'd say DRM matters, no matter whether you plan to copy discs or not. Probably more so than to the pirates, as usual.
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I would have said that about DVDs not so long ago. Disk space and bandwidth become cheaper with time.
And besides copying, a DRM crack allows me to play discs on the operating system of my choice, to extract small parts of the feature for purposes of review, criticism or parody, and to bypass any annoying previews, trailers, propaganda, threats, or other junk that the studio may have seen fit to prepend to the show.
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High fidelity audio however is an entirely different story.
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*WHOOOSH*
Y2k300! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Y2k300! (Score:5, Funny)
Parent
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Speaking of... (Score:2)
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Well yes... (Score:3, Insightful)
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The worse part? (Score:3, Funny)
But what we really want to know is.... (Score:2)
Re:But what we really want to know is.... (Score:5, Funny)
Parent
Which definition of a zetabyte? (Score:4, Interesting)
Since we're talking very large orders of magnitude it would help to know what definition of zetabyte they're using.
2^50 bytes or 10^15 bytes?
The former is astronomically larger.
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Re:Which definition of a zetabyte? (Score:5, Funny)
Parent
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Anyway, most measurements of mass storage (bandwidth quotas, hard disk capacity etc) seem to measured in actual megabytes (MB), gigabytes (GB) etc, as opposed to binary megabytes (MiB), binary gigabytes (GiB) and so on. Binary byte prefixes only seem to be used for RAM and flash these days, presumably because of the convenient manufacturing realities involved - and I really wish that manufacturers of th
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Re:Which definition of a zetabyte? (Score:4, Insightful)
No, the confusion is cause by using a pseudo-binary based number system in a world where almost everything else is decimal.
Quick question: You have a 2000 MiB video file and a 2470 MiB video file. Will they both fit on a 4.37 GiB DVD? Now you need your calculator.
It's much easier to figure out if a 2097 MB and a 2590 MB file fit on a 4.7 GB disk. You can do that in your head.
I've been burned numerous times by programs ambiguously reporting sizes in KiB and MiB causing me to run out of space on something that I'm trying to fill. All storage sizes should always be reported in decimal numbers. If RAM manufacturers want to keep using powers of two due to the implementation detail of how their chips are constructed, they should *always* use KiB, MiB and GiB.
Parent
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For everything else, that is, using a computer, it's back to binary.
It is not. RAM is the only quantity in computers commonly measured in binary. Hard drives have always been in decimal. Floppies have always been in an even more stupid system where "MB" == 1000*1024. Clock speeds have always been decimal.
Going farther, measuring IO or network performance, to cite two trivial examples, or understanding any of those subjects in general, you're binary to binary.
You appear to have been bambooozled yourself by the confusion caused by this issue. I/O speed of buses is always decimal because it derives from MHz and GHz, which are decimal. Network bandwidth is more often measured in decimal megabits, not binary.
You seem to thi
Wrong metric? (Score:4, Interesting)
On another note, how much does a zettabyte actually yield these days, drive manufacturers might just give you 700 Petabytes for it. Oblig. XKCD: http://xkcd.org/394/ [xkcd.org]
Signal to noise ration (Score:2)
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I'm not saying that formatting data is entirely without worth, but there's definitely some improvements to be had WRT efficiency.
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Data figures are misleading (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes, there is a lot of data in the world. But is there really that much more information out there? A zillion copies of the same song just means more data, not more information.
recycling plastic (Score:2)
...and by 2020, a single install of Photoshop (Score:2)
Insert Animal House reference here (Score:2)
I think we all know what this means. (Score:2)
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and technicallly, there is only one SI definition of zettabyte [wikipedia.org], which is 10^21. The binary definitions used by the IEC like the zettabyte=2^70 are being renamed to avoid ambiguity (proposed to be zebibyte for zeta binary byte).
meh... (Score:2)
You are answering yourself (Score:2)
Re:You are answering yourself (Score:4, Interesting)
After enough of the male population has been brain mapped, it will probably turn out like spam: there's only so many unique permutations, as long as the scene is dressed up a little differently from time to time to maintain the novelty factor.
Pron seems to be a lot like Big Bertha, where each mortar round was larger than the last, to accommodate progressive barrel enlargement. Eventually the images become extremely shocking to get any response at all.
http://www.wired.com/science/discoveries/news/2008/03/mri_vision [wired.com]
The future of compression is not to send the picture itself, but the reduced specification for an image that produces the same effect on the human visual system. We're already doing this with psycho-acoustic encoding.
Once we have a sufficiently sophisticated model of human sensory perception, mental and emotional responses (which will run to TBs I'm sure), we can run a competition for the best feature movie encoded in under 4KB. Mostly it would describe desired emotional responses and cognitive states, the actual images would be back-generated to achieve this effect as determined by the human perceptual model.
Parent
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Wet processing is excellent for some restricted purposes, wet storage just plain sucks.