Array-Based Memory May Put a Terabyte On a Chip 93
Lucas123 writes "A new type of flash memory, called array-based memory, could offer a terabyte of data on a single chip within the next decade by bypassing current NAND memory technology, which is limited by the miniaturization capability of lithography. According to the Computerworld story, start-up Nanochip Inc. is being backed by Intel and others, and over 11 years has made research breakthroughs that will enable it to deliver working prototypes to potential manufacturing partners next year. And by 2010, the first chips are expected to reach 100GB capacity."
Good News Everybody! (Score:5, Funny)
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I sincerely hope that they come up with a couple of really really good high speed data methods for wireless so that in 2012 I'll be able to watch the end of the calendar in HD on my cellular phone... while streaming "2010, the movie to a nearby friend.
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It's just harder to tell where individual humans are on the evolutionary scale.
God(Truth/Beauty) is present at every level, in the most palatable form for that level.
Unfortunately, a lot of humans never distill enough truths from their consumption to evolve to the next level (True happiness :) ).
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I'm truly happy. :)
Maybe one day, you will get there as well. You see, i speak from experience, you speak with the authority of other peoples thoughts
The false promise of happiness is the carrot that leads you astray. Being happy is the realization that there is nothing to reach for, you already have the carrot.
People seem to think that knowing a word means that they understand the movement that underlies the word. This is the problem with our society. Do you
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I think there is a world market for maybe five people to watch movies on a phone.
(with apologies to Thomas Watson)
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USB 3.0 desperately needed here... (Score:4, Informative)
http://www.usb.org/usb30 [usb.org]
http://www.eetimes.com/news/latest/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=201807389 [eetimes.com]
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OTOH, most people only transfer small amount of data at a time, say a few paltry gigs at most.
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Re:USB 3.0 desperately needed here... (Score:5, Insightful)
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http://www.amazon.com/Linksys-Storage-Link-Drives-NSLU2/dp/B0001FSCZO [amazon.com]
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BTW, I checked out the linked, and initially thought it was a TB of storage. I about wet myself. heh
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It's not a NAS (that's Network Attached Storage) if you have to use an external box to attach it to a network. The USB disk only implements the "S" part.
So if your point is that a hard drive can be used over USB2, that's very insightful for you. You're just in the right place.
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I do my work natively under Plan 9, so I don't have much experience using Venti and Linux.
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Not really for me. I would prefer that it was GPL because then it might be possible to port it to Linux and create a great home backup system. I am License neutral. I thank any programmer or group that releases code for free so I can learn from and maybe even contribute to. I am grateful for Free as in beer software that makes my life easier or better
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Honestly, though, if you really want the best experience with Venti I suggest installin
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That is if it has the one killer feature that WHS lacks. Data integrity.
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Whenever you do a backup. At least, whenever you do a full backup. (You can do incremental backups, but it's best to do a full one every now and then.)
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What is this, 2002 ?
Everyone with more than 1TB of online storage in their home, raise of hands!
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Re:USB 3.0 desperately needed here... (Score:4, Informative)
Problem solved.
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It appears that the 10GBASE-CX4 802.3ak would be the best choice of the 10GigE options, but the hardware for either end of the UTP cables is a bit steep for any affordable SOHO device.
I sometimes back up entire PC's using a *nix boot disk to external storage. Anything that transfers all the drive(s) data much faster would reduce the need to open the box to plug in an IDE or SATA cable to my backup drive(s). The fact that inexpensive commodity Gigabit Ethernet device
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USB 3.0 or *something faster* will be required for devices this large in portable storage capacity.. USB 2.0 is ~480Mbps (theoretical max) and it would take forever to transfer a terabyte over USB 2.0.
Firewire 400 is already faster than USB 2.0 in practical use. It was designed for heavy media/disk usage from the beginning, unlike USB that was meant to replace the old serial/parallel ports for slow peripherals. For one thing, USB only has a single-pair data cable that carries either incoming or outgoing data at one time, while FW has dedicated pairs for both directions (like twisted-pair Ethernet). I haven't found USB's CPU usage a problem in practice, but nevertheless it feels much slower. For exampl
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Firewire is an abomination. So is USB. They're both advances over what came before them though. The real tragedy is that SSA, a technology vastly superior to eith
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Firewire was not "designed for heavy media/disk usage from the beginning", it was not designed for that use at all in the beginning. Disk attachment doesn't need isochronous transfers or peer to peer protocols. [...] The real tragedy is that SSA, a technology vastly superior to either of them, lost out. At least we have SATA now.
Firewire and USB are designed and used for many applications besides disk drives. Isochronous transfers and p2p networking are needed with DV, for example.
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That's just for Firewire 400, and we already have faster versions. I find it really unfortunate that USB is being pushed so much while FW is in decline. The USB 3.0 with its fiberoptic links looks like a particularly desperate move to extend the standard, not the least when you consider the fragility of fiberoptics in the hands of end users.
the problem with firewire can be blamed 100% on apple, when it came out rather than embracing pc firewire, it fought for years to try to keep it out of the hands of pc users- as a result you have the obcurely serial named firewire port on pc's that took years to be added to mainboard support and during those yearss people were already replacing their serial connections with usb, so they were used to just plugging something into a usb port.
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Is that metric forever, or English?
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USB 3.0 or *something faster* will be required for devices this large in portable storage capacity..
It is not that bad- 500 gigs takes about 8-12 hours (depending on # of files, large files are at full speed based on the single handshake that the data has to do wheras if there are 1000 files taking the same space as that 1 it takes a whole lot longer)- I do this all of the time as I take in terabytes of raw data for cases all of the time and have to copy the data to our local network for us to process in my job for litigation where we are bound not to crack the cases on factory sealed drives- our averag
cantilever memory is decades old (Score:3, Informative)
A better summary would have said "Improvements to cantilever memory hold promise for 1TB chips by 2018" or something similar.
Wikipedia has some information [wikipedia.org] on non-memory uses of micro-cantilevers.
Tiny little rewritable DVD (Score:1)
I can't imagine 1 TB (Score:1, Redundant)
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http://www.jamesshuggins.com/h/tek1/how_big.htm [jamesshuggins.com]
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Personally, I love the idea of small, high capacity, solid state drives. The systems I admin are used for GIS research, and I dread what may happen anytime one of the researches takes a laptop into the field for data collection. So far, the worst which has happened was that one laptop went for a swim, which might have been ok except the salinity of the water was very high.
Ok, so a solid state drive may not have helped too much in that case, but for the occasional drop, ba
Interesting move (Score:2)
50 Gigs (Score:4, Interesting)
Imagine: not having to worry about your media obsoleting because the interface is so cheap and useful that it is guaranteed to be on every computing device long after it has been surpassed by superior buses.
Imagine a robust format that doesn't skip or scratch, even if you keep it in your pocket with your keys.
Imagine a built-in crypto chip ensuring strong DRM by essencially creating an encrypted ssh tunnel straight to your video display device, using a different key every time for the actual data.
(ok, the last one's maybe not so great, but there's no reason why anything with a usb connect can't have the crypto built in, so you'd still have your portability. If there's still a problem, then it's better to enforce the rules as perfectly as possible. People don't usually object to rules that don't affect them, witness the capricious speed laws for your example there)
Re:50 Gigs (Score:4, Interesting)
According to the series of tubes "The best way to repeal a bad law is to enforce it." was first said by Lincoln, Grant, and several other old dead guys. It might hold true for criminal laws which regulate behaviors, it doesn't work so well for thing that regulate the flow of money. Mostly because the laws which regulate the flow of money, make it flow into the pockets of the powerful. Secondly they people who are in a position to make the needed changes aren't actually effected by something like a $25 CD, because they have two or three orders of magnitude more disposable income than the rest of the society. The richest 10% own 89% of the stock. [marketresearch.com] In a corporate world where everything is beholden to the shareholder, those 10% are the only ones who really count. That same 10% isn't effected by overpriced CDs or overpriced gas or overpriced pharmaceuticals, because they have plenty of cash to cover it without it effecting their quality of life.
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In a corporate world where everything is beholden to the shareholder, those 10% are the only ones who really count. That same 10% isn't effected by overpriced CDs or overpriced gas or overpriced pharmaceuticals, because they have plenty of cash to cover it without it effecting their quality of life.
That's an interesting statistic about stock ownership. But I wouldn't be so sure they don't feel the effect of rising prices -- especially gas prices. The top 10% starts at about $100K. I know several people with incomes over 100K and trust me, ANYONE can live at or beyond their means. Plus, wealthier people probably USE more gas in their big cars and trucks. Why, even Rush Limbaugh once complained that he had to ask his pilot to fly his private jet slower because of the rising cost of jet fuel.
Okay
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month of unrepeating p0rn in an iPod (Score:2)
How fast is it ? (Score:2)
Longevity and speed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Longevity and speed (Score:5, Interesting)
So yes, this system has moving parts. The tips have to scan across the surface, and the cantilevers are basically springs that bend up and down as the tips move over the surface. This definitely has some wear issues to consider, but it's nothing like the large-scale and high-speed movements of a hard drive (where a >2" disk is rotating at >7,000 rpm). Instead, the tips are moving laterally by micrometers at most (the huge array is what allows a large surface to be probed), and the cantilevers are springing up-and-down by only nanometers. The movement in an AFM is controlled using piezoelectric [wikipedia.org] deformation of quartz actuators. This small-scale movement is very robust and reproducible. Quartz oscillators can vibrate/move thousands of times a second continuously for years without much problem (think of oscillators used for clocks, etc.). Moreover this technology has been used in commercial AFMs for years, so it's well-understood.
The thousands of tips are probably all actuated together by a single piezo-motor. They move in unison which would actually allow for high-speed reading/writing (since thousands of bits are read/written at once). You're right that each tip is in principle a point of failure. However, with the right error-correction algorithm, the device could be built so that even if a few tips break, no data is lost.
I agree that the access time isn't going to be as fast as modern RAM, but it could very well be faster than modern hard-drives. I think this is intended as permanent storage, not volatile memory.
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In nanoscale, material fatique and stuff is pretty much nonexistent, but i would be interested in seeing a millipede system that can even reach MLC-Flash levels of write cycles...
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So, basically, it is a punch card !?
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Actually... (Score:1)
The bit-streamed image code entering the semiconductor directs each mirror to switch on and off up to several thousand times per second. When a mirror is switched on more frequently than off, it reflects a light gray pixel; a mirror that's switched off more fr
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I read this as... (Score:2)
I guess you need a lot of porn to keep you entertained on a long tour.
Who needs that much? (Score:1)
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Magic Material? (Score:1)