Several companies, including Hitachi/Maxwell and Optware, are working on holographic media. In the latter's case, projected disc space - on something the size of a DVD - will be in the multiple terabyte range (100 times more than HD DVD or Blue-ray). Optware's HVD format works by sending two lasers, one red and one green or blue, toward the disc. A layer reflects the green or blue laser and lets the red laser pass through. The red laser reads a layer of pits and lands (like with a regular DVD). The green or blue laser reads the data containing layer in three dimensions (back and forth, as with a DVD, and also vertically). That's thousands of 1080p/24 content on one single disc. Don't expect it in a home format any time soon though.
Note: Source: Home Theater Magazine.
To find out more about what HVD (Holographic Versatile Disc) is, read this Wikipedia article.
P.S. Makes me think about the famous quote by Bill Gates in 1981: "No user will ever need more than 640 kilobytes of RAM". Classic!
Blue-ray and HD DVD Are for Chumps
- lieutfunaki
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Re: Blue-ray and HD DVD Are for Chumps
It was enough to put a man on the moon, It's enough for me.Lawndart wrote:P.S. Makes me think about the famous quote by Bill Gates in 1981: "No user will ever need more than 640 kilobytes of RAM". Classic!
