Sony develops a new tech 185TB magnetic tapes 3,700 times more storage than a Blu-ray disc.
Sony develops a new tech 185TB magnetic tapes with 3,700 times more storage than a Blu-ray disc.
Back in 2010, the standing record for how much data magnetic tape could store was 29.5GB per square inch.
To compare, a standard dual-layer Blu-ray disc can hold 25GB per layer —
this is why big budget, current-gen video games can clock in at around 40 or 50GB.
That, however, is an entire disc, whereas magnetic tape could store
more than half of that capacity in one little square inch. Sony has
announced that it has developed a new magnetic tape material that
demolishes the previous 29.5GB record, and can hold a whopping 148GB per square inch,
making it the new record holder of storage density for the medium. If
spooled into a cartridge, each tape could have a mind-boggling 185TB of
storage. Again, to compare, that’s 3,700 dual-layer 50GB Blu-rays (a
stack that would be 14.3 feet or 4.4 meters high, incidentally). In
fact, one of these tapes would hold five more terabytes than a $9,305 hard drive storage array.
Perhaps surprisingly, storage tape shipments grew 13% two years ago, and were headed for a 26% growth just last year. Sony also stated that it would like to commercialize the new material — as well as continue developing its sputter deposition methods — but did not say if or when it will ever happen. While 185TB of storage sitting on a single cartridge is extremely appealing for people with large digital collections — music, games, or really any kind of media — it’s best to remember that the storage medium of tape has never been easy access. Read and write times feel like (and often are) an oblivion, and tape is used mainly for safe-keeping backup, rather than because you have too much music on your SSD and want to free up space for a new game. Still, when it comes to massive, non-time-sensitive storage, tape storage libraries are still one of the most common methods used by big corporations.
Sony will present the new material to an audience at the international magnetics conference, Intermag Europe 2014.
soucre:www.extremetech.com
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