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InternetNews July 27, 2005 Paul Shread |
InPhase Nears Storage Breakthrough The idea of holographic storage has been pursued for more than four decades, but InPhase says the technology is nearing commercial reality. |
The Motley Fool June 13, 2005 Dan Bloom |
You Think Blu-ray Is Exciting? Holographic data storage, which is being pursued by a small private company called InPhase Technologies, promises to crush Blu-ray in storage capacity. |
PC World February 20, 2002 Kuriko Miyake |
Terabyte Optical Disc in Development Optware refines holographic technology so disc can store more than 100 DVDs... |
Scientific American February 7, 2005 J.R. Minkel |
More Bits in Pits A DVD-like system called multiplexed optical data storage (MODS) could take a run at holographic storage. |
Technology Research News October 17, 2005 |
Data storage technologies Today's magnetic disk drives could be improved by incorporating much larger magnetoresistance or replaced by microelectromechanical systems (MEMS), near-field optics, holographic systems, or even molecules for better data storage solutions. |
InternetNews June 25, 2007 Paul Shread |
Call/Recall Pushes Optical Limits A private company with roots in Bell Labs hopes to put optical storage on the enterprise map with new technology that squeezes 1TB on a single disk and offers transfer rates that compete with hard disk drives. |
Technology Research News October 20, 2004 |
Angles increase optical storage Ten years from now, one thousand gigabytes of data -- the equivalent of 472 hours of film -- could fit on an optical disk the size of a DVD. That's just over 200 times the storage of today's common 4.7-gigabyte DVDs. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics December 2004 |
Hard Drives Rule for Military Storage Military designers continue to favor hard drives for data storage because of their density and cost efficiency, but new technologies are on the way, including holographic optical storage and flash devices. |
PC Magazine May 3, 2006 Sebastian Rupley |
Data in 3D Holographic storage is coming out of the labs. Will it soon go mainstream? |
Military & Aerospace Electronics March 2006 |
InPhase Drives Holographic Memory with Cypress Chips The InPhase prototype demonstrates a new generation of storage-well beyond DVD, magnetic tape and disk. Holographic storage delivers high capacity by recording data with laser flashes throughout the volume of the recording material, and not just on the surface. |
The Motley Fool November 29, 2005 Tim Beyers |
Welcome Back, Maxell An old innovator returns in style, with a new type of storage media. Today it is working with InPhase Technologies, a spin-off from Lucent, to create a new removable drive capable of storing more than 300 gigabytes of data. Investors, take note. |
IEEE Spectrum February 2008 Neil Savage |
The Erasable Holographic Display New three-dimensional holographic material can be written and rewritten indefinitely, paving the way toward 3-D movies. |
Popular Mechanics January 2010 Tyghe Trimble |
3 Next-Gen Fixes to the Coming Hard-Drive Crisis Hard drives could reach their limits by 2015 unless researchers can find new ways to cram more information onto their disks. |
PC Magazine June 8, 2005 John R. Quain |
A New Dimension in Storage InPhase Technologies' prototype drive packs 300GB of data on one disc. |
Technology Research News March 26, 2003 Eric Smalley |
3D holo video arrives Researchers from the University of Texas have devised a three-dimensional video system that cuts down the computing power needed to project three-dimensional images by using an 800,000-mirror device designed for two-dimensional digital projectors as a sort of holographic film. |
InternetNews January 4, 2007 Paul Shread |
Holographic Storage Appears InPhase is shipping its first holographic storage drives and media, turning a 40-year-old dream into reality. |
Chemistry World February 7, 2008 Lewis Brindley |
3d Television a Step Closer to Reality Watching televisions in 3D could be a reality in future thanks to a polymer that allows holograms to be recorded and erased on a single display. |
Industrial Physicist Dec 2003/Jan 2004 Eric J. Lerner |
Briefs Infrared tissue scans... Better electronic paper... Rapid manufacturing... Flipping storage fields |
Chemistry World April 7, 2011 Andy Extance |
Surface plasmons create vivid holograms Plasmons are "quasiparticles" that are observed when electrons in a metal collectively oscillate at light wave frequency. |
Home Theater May 5, 2009 |
GE Disc Stores Half a Terabyte General Electric has developed an optical disc format using microholographic technology that stores 500 gigabytes, or about 100 times the capacity of a DVD, and 10 times the capacity of a Blu-ray dual-layer disc. |
Chemistry World January 21, 2014 Simon Hadlington |
Cheap and colourful holographic sensors Scientists in the UK have developed a holographic sensor that changes color in response to particular analytes. |
IEEE Spectrum September 2010 Schow et al. |
Get on the Optical Bus IBM's light-powered links overcome the greatest speed bump in supercomputing: interconnect bandwidth |
Insurance & Technology June 1, 2006 George Jones |
5 Technologies You Need to Know About Here are five specific advances in hardware, software and Internet tech that should be on every technophile's, Web strategist's and CTO's radar. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics December 2005 Ben Ames |
Military storage designers call for hard drives Disk drives are still getting denser-slowly-but they easily outstrip solid-state for price and capacity. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics July 2005 Hubert Kostal |
Nano-optics: robust, optical devices for demanding applications In harsh environments, conventional optics and optical engineering have significant physical limitations. But, through nanometer-scale structuring of various materials, "Nano-optics" creates a new class of optical devices with desirable optical effects. |
Technology Research News November 17, 2004 |
2D Holograms Make 3D Color Display Researchers have developed a three-dimensional color display that uses a set of six holograms and is made from relatively compact and inexpensive components. |
The Motley Fool March 29, 2007 Anders Bylund |
SMART Feeds the Video Revolution Memory specialist SMART Modular Technologies looks poised for some explosive growth here, if Samsung's estimates are anywhere near reality. Investors, take note. |
Technology Research News December 31, 2003 |
Colors expand neural net Researchers from the University of Tokyo have worked out a way to form an especially fast optical neural network by tapping the wave nature of lightwaves rather than just the amplitude, or strength of a signal. |
PC Magazine May 18, 2005 Don Labriola |
Discs After DVD: Blue-Light Specials Early adopters of blue-laser drives will likely use them as storage peripherals. A variety of other optical-disc formats and streaming content-delivery services will soon be vying for the same consumer dollars, and DVDs themselves may continue to be the leading video storage and distribution medium through the end of the decade. |
Technology Research News October 8, 2003 |
CD writer generates holograms Researchers from Cambridge University in England have found a way to turn an ordinary CD writer into a device that burns two-dimensional holograms onto CDs. |
Technology Research News January 26, 2005 |
Plastic Records Infrared Light Researchers have extended the sensitivity of photorefractive polymers so that they can be used at the common infrared communications frequency of 1550 nanometers. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics January 2006 |
L-3 Buys Electro-Optics Company Leaders at L-3 Communications announced in November they had acquired EOTech Inc. for $49 million. |
Entrepreneur September 2004 Amanda C. Kooser |
Tech Buzz 09/04 Important: Care for those disks... Renewing anti-virus software... etc. |
Technology Research News September 24, 2003 |
Teamed lasers make smaller spots Researchers from Boston University have tapped the properties of polarization in order to focus a laser beam more tightly in space. The method could be used to scan objects in finer detail and to make finer features in processes like rapid prototyping and photolithography. |
PC Magazine March 1, 2006 |
Bits & Bites v25n5 The Holographic Virtual Disc Alliance (HVD) has rallied Fuji Photo and others behind plans to develop optical discs that store a terabyte of data. |