Stored Data to Exceed 1.8 Zettabytes by 2011 143
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.""
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)
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http://damnsmalllinux.org/network-install.html [damnsmalllinux.org]
Debian has a 5-floppy installer still as well : http://ftp.nl.debian.org/debian/dists/etch/main/installer-i386/current/images/floppy/ [debian.org]
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Re:That is a lot of... (Score:4, Funny)
mods gone wild (Score:2)
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Yeah and I remember when moonpies were a nickel, and someone besides old grampas knew what the hell a moonpie was.
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Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
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I think the article is bunk. Let's say we can store a bit in the space of just one atom. As storage grows at some point the entire Earth is covered 1 foot deep in atom sized bits. Then in 100 more years the stacked of bits reached past the orbit of the moon. This will never happen.
I think when people look back at the 21st century they will see it as a period when storage grew fast and then ettled down to a stedy state. Exp
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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.
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.
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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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Try sitting across a 16' x 20'(or larger) living room from you monitor with a dozen of your friends sometime and then maybe an investment in a wall-mounted LCD or plasma screen might start to make more sense.
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You've got a point about the projector, but it wouldn't work in my place. I don't have a good place to put it where it would still project onto a suitable wall without doing some serious remodeling. Even it I did, I have TV par
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Take a look at monoprice or Blue Jeans Cables. Both are highly regarded on AVS Forum, SA's A/V Arena, and other large home theater forums while charging prices that have a lot more to do with reality. Last time I checked, a 25 foot HDMI cable at Best Buy was in the $200 range. The same length can be had for between $25 and $75 from Blue Jeans or $15 to $50 from monoprice.
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Properly Set Up TV For The Win... (Score:2)
but you'll never see it if your TV can't natively display 1080p (or at least 720)
Having experienced both, I'd still pick upscaled DVD on a well calibrated, high quality 720p or 1080i TV than BluRay on the majority of 1080p TVs as they come out of the box.
Yes, extra resolution is a wonderful thing. IF you can see it.
Lousy upscaled DVD to lousy 1080p gives you lots more lousy pixels and a nice, reassuring feeling. Look how sharp the artificial edges of the overblown sharpening settings are now! Look how you can really get a sense of the edge of the large area that's lost in the shadows.
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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*
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Blu-ray has horrifying DRM and doesn't really look that much better than DVDs with good postprocessing
You are talking out of your ill-informed inexperienced ass. There is a high degree of probability that you haven't actually seen a hi-def video on a hi-def TV but let's examine your assertion anyway.
You are saying that there is not much difference between 1920x1080p and a 720x480i picture. Think about it. I'm interested to know more about this "good postprocessing" that can somehow make DVD even approach
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What, are you kidding? Blu-ray has horrifying DRM
Were you planning on storing all your blu-ray movies on a file server at up to 50GB a pop (I have a 500GB NAS box at home and I think that would struggle to contain all my DVDs - which include a few TV series' - even if they were compressed)? It's not like the DRM isn't easily cracked anyway, what are you complaining about? Plus, how exactly does upscaling a picture compare with actual extra resolution? I've yet to buy my PS3 and try out the upscaling of course, but between an anti-aliased&sharpened/wh
Y2k300! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Y2k300! (Score:5, Funny)
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Speaking of... (Score:2)
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The representation of information doesn't use any matter whatsoever. The concrete representation may be any reliable organization of the matter it relies on, to as many possible permutations as that matter is capable of being configured into. It should be obvious that you can represent 10^80 things without 10^80 elementary particles.. for example, you just did, when you
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Well yes... (Score:3, Insightful)
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Well under 15% of my data is personal photos, music, and reports. Probably something like 1% of the stuff on my computer is personal (5GB)
Even my sisters computer only had a gig or so of personal data, with 8 times that is installed programs, and then the music...
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The worse part? (Score:3, Funny)
But what we really want to know is.... (Score:2)
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Re:But what we really want to know is.... (Score:5, Funny)
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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)
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Actually I got my orders of magnitude screwed up and I replied to my own post to correct it
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The difference in terms of ratio is actually 2^70 / 10^21 = 1.18 ish. Which may not seem too significant, but on that scale, that's a LOT of bytes.
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kilo ~= 2.5%
mega ~= 5%
giga ~= 7.5%
tera ~= 10%
peta ~= 12.5%
exa ~= 15%
zeta ~= 17.5%
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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.
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No, the confusion is caused by insisting on using base ten for a system that doesn't use it.
That fact that you may be "more comfortable" with base ten is irrelevant. In fact, it's little different than those accustomed to Imperial measurements habitually recalculating metric measurements in their head, and then exclaiming, "The metric system is too complicated and too much work."
It's
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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
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No, the confusion is caused by insisting on using base ten for a system that doesn't use it.
No, the confusion is caused by insisting on using an SI-prefix that has meant exactly 1000 since 1795 to now mean something else. Hence the new 'kibi' instead of 'kilo'.
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.
Interesting that you mention these two examples, since they use base 10 as is proper. 1 Gbit/s means 1,000,000,000 bits/s. From the all-knowing wikipedia:
The megabit is most commonly used when referring to data transfer rates in network speeds, e.g. a 100 Mbit/s (megabit per second) Fast Ethernet connection. In this context, like elsewhere in telecommunications, it always equals 10^6 bits.
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Just remember how "Quarter Pounder" is illegal as a commercial item in Germany. There is SI, and everything else is *illegal* to use in commerce.
PLEASE, stop this nonesense! (Score:1)
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.
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]
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If there are about a thousand companies equal to the company
Peak data? (Score:1)
How long can it grow by a factor of 10 every 5 years until we hit some fundamental limit?
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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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This is just a general observation. When did the use of "wrt" take off? I seem to see it everywhere. Wouldn't it be more efficient to just say "there are definitely some efficiency improvements to be had" instead of "there's definitely some improvements to be had WRT efficiency"?
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Someday... (Score:1)
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Wet processing is excellent for some restricted purposes, wet storage just plain sucks.
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.
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There's also a limit on how much information can be consumed per person (or searched, etc.,---beyond a certai
recycling plastic (Score:2)
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...and by 2020, a single install of Photoshop (Score:2)
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and 98% (Score:1)
Zettajillion (Score:1)
[Fry stands up and raises his hand.]
FRY: One jillion dollars.
[The bidders gasp in shock.]
AUCTIONEER: Sir, that's not a number.
[The bidders gasp again.]
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)
4 Gigs. (Score:2, Insightful)
Not so many zeros. . . (Score:2)
A zettabyte is 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 bytes, or 10 to the 21st power.
--Does this include data stored in landfills?
Okay. Silly article. Moving on now.
-FL
Tubes huh? (Score:2)