OK, right now, most of usĀ may not need to store 360 terabytes of data. And the tax office here in Australia only requires you to keep your files for a maximum of seven years. But this technology may just find a use in your home regardless.
Imagine having an inter-generational record of people and events that shaped lives – a record that is added to by your great-grandchildren and perhaps, viewed and even updated, by theirĀ great-grandchildren. Photographs, birth, death and marriage certificates, a copy of your favourite movie (copyright permitting) and even your genome!
At a corporate and governmental level, this has to be the ultimate disaster recovery tool. Every 0 and 1 sitting on say, every Google server, couldĀ be stored in a safe the size of a shoebox! Yes, even Facebook’s dataĀ can probably be squeezed into the same safe :)
It’s estimated that, globally, we’re producing the equivalent of 10Ā million single sided blue-ray disks full of data every day. It’s being stored, sometimes in the cloud, sometimes on ‘guaranteed to fail eventually’ HDD’s and, more often than not, on optical disks. Blue-ray disk technolgy now allows for 50gb of storage on a dual layer disk. That means thatĀ just one of these tiny glass disks can store the equivalent of more than 7,500 Blue-ray disks. If that doesn’t impress you, imagine having to insert 7,500 disks versus just one.
To create such dense storage,Ā researchers from the University of SouthamptonĀ used a process called femtosecond laser writing to print in five – yes, five, dimensions!
The process creates the small glass discs using an ultra-fast laser. The laser generates short, very intense pulses of light. These pulses can write data in three layers of nanostructured dots separated by 5 micrometres (that’s 0.005 mm). The remaining two dimensionsĀ are the size and orientation of the dot.
Although the technology is real and proven, it is still some way from being commercialised. For a start, theĀ disks need to be readĀ using an optical microscope in tandem with a polariser (a filter designed to block specific polarisations of light), neither of which are likely to be sitting on your desk right now :)
None-the-less, like all technological leaps, the potential is exciting, not just for what it is today, but the inevitable new uses that will be found as it is developed further.
14 billion years?
Yes, being glass, there is no reason for the material or the data stored on it to degrade. The disks can withstand temperatures of 1,000Ā° centigrade (1,832Ā° Fahrenheit) so the bad news is that those embarrassing photos you posted on Facebook are likely to haunt you forever!
The reality is that humankind is unlikely to witness the final moments of Earth and our solar system, but maybe, just maybe, your digital self will.
Feel free to share your thoughts via the Comments section below!