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Forget gigabyte drives. Next up, protein coated 50 TERABYTE optical discs

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Alien1099

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Apr 27, 2006
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Phoenix, AZ USA
http://in.tech.yahoo.com/060708/139/65pz8.html

Indian-born scientist developing coated DVD's that can make hard disks obsolete

Sydney, Jul 8 (ANI): An Indian born scientist in the US is working on developing DVD's which can be coated with a light -sensitive protein and can store up to 50 terabytes (about 50,000 gigabytes) of data.

Professor V Renugopalakrishnan of the Harvard Medical School in Boston has claimed to have developed a layer of protein made from tiny genetically altered microbe proteins which could store enough data to make computer hard disks almost obsolete.

"What this will do eventually is eliminate the need for hard drive memory completely," ABC quoted Prof. Renugopalakrishnan, a BSc in Chemistry from Madras University and PhD in biophysics from Columbia/State University of New York, Buffalo, New York as saying.

The light-activated protein is found in the membrane of a salt marsh microbe Halobacterium salinarum and is also known as bacteriorhodopsin (bR). It captures and stores sunlight to convert it to chemical energy. When light shines on bR, it is converted to a series of intermediate molecules each with a unique shape and colour before returning to its 'ground state'.

Since the intermediates generally only last for hours or days, Prof Renugopalakrishnan and his colleagues modified the DNA that produces bR protein to produce an intermediate that lasts for more than several years. They also engineered the bR protein to make its intermediates more stable at the high temperatures generated by storing terabytes of data.

This, they said, ultimately paved the way for a binary system to store data.

"The ground state could be the zero and any of the intermediates could be the one," he said.

Prof Renugopalakrishnan now opines that the protein layer could also allow DVDs and other external devices to store terabytes of information.

The new protein-based DVD will have advantages over current optical storage devices such as the Blue-ray as well, because the information is stored in proteins that are only a few nanometres across.

"The protein-based DVDs will be able to store at least 20 times more than the Blue-ray and eventually even up to 50,000 gigabytes (about 50 terabytes) of information. You can pack literally thousands and thousands of those proteins on a media like a DVD, a CD or a film or whatever," he said.

The high-capacity storage devices will be essential to the defence, medical and entertainment industries.

"You have a compelling need that is not going to be met with the existing magnetic storage technology," he added.

However, there's a flip side to it also.

"Science can be used and abused. Making large amounts of information so portable on high-capacity removable storage devices will make it easier for information to fall into the wrong hands. Information can be stolen very quickly. One has to have some safeguards there," he added.

The findings were presented at the International Conference on Nanoscience and Nanotechnology in Brisbane this week. (ANI)
 
pwn3d. :D

50 Terabytes though... DAAANG. Gotta wonder what the read/write times would be like though. At that density they should be great, but if it takes a lot of work to "read" the protien, perhaps not.

If holographic storage dosen't pan out and reach the consumer, this is definatly my next hope!

JigPu
 
JigPu said:
pwn3d. :D

50 Terabytes though... DAAANG. Gotta wonder what the read/write times would be like though. At that density they should be great, but if it takes a lot of work to "read" the protien, perhaps not.

If holographic storage dosen't pan out and reach the consumer, this is definatly my next hope!

JigPu
I don't think holographic discs will make it... they hold 150 GB per disc which could be compared to blu-ray with a few layers and BR will probably be cheaper. Unless holographic discs are MUCH cheaper I think they will skip right over them.

Couple years ago we had floppies and cd's and now we have floppies, cd's, dvd, hd-dvd's, blue-ray and who know what else we'll have 10 years from now.
 
thegreek said:
I don't think holographic discs will make it... they hold 150 GB per disc which could be compared to blu-ray with a few layers and BR will probably be cheaper. Unless holographic discs are MUCH cheaper I think they will skip right over them.

Couple years ago we had floppies and cd's and now we have floppies, cd's, dvd, hd-dvd's, blue-ray and who know what else we'll have 10 years from now.

i expect blue-ray and hd-dvd to lower in price over 2 years, than that will be the mainstream for a few more years, than we will get some uber cool 200+gb dvd thingy that will be awesome
 
It would be amusing if someone reintroduced tape drive storage.. Those things were so fun back in the day.. speically when the drive died.. which happened a lot.
 
thegreek said:
I don't think holographic discs will make it... they hold 150 GB per disc which could be compared to blu-ray with a few layers and BR will probably be cheaper. Unless holographic discs are MUCH cheaper I think they will skip right over them.
As much of a holo fanboy as I am, I've got to agree. Once blu-ray was no longer just a concept, the possibility for holographic entering the consumer market pretty much evaporated. But I can still hope that irrational fanboy hope that everything will change overnight :D

JigPu
 
^^ i guess.

our bodies are essentially constructed of the same material as all "inorganic" matter on earth.

just put together in a different way.


simple microbial enzymes and structures are essentially the building blocks of life. the ascimilate the simpler strutures in life to create more diverse and complex structures of their own.

much like how us human take money and build computers for example.

At this rate. we'll eventually get to a point where we have the technology to do what these small microbes do and end up building computers and machines that are far more efficient in their tasks then they are now.

after that. its only a matter of evolution and adaptation.
 
Imagine the size of information to come in the future. Exobytes and Exobytes of data for companies, even for the home users...all that porn, j/k. But I've always wondered what kind of storage medium some of those sci fi movies and shows use. How big the files/folders/items are.
 
Light sensitive...well how do they plan to read with out any light interfearing and changing the data...just a quick comment, I dont expect a serious answer.
 
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