View Full Version : DVD gone...HVD wow...


celestial_hunter
11th Aug '07 Sat, 12:08
HVD the NEW Tech Disc of the FUTURE...


HVD:
Holographic Versatile Disc (HVD) is an optical disc technology still in the research stage which would hold up to 3.9 terabytes (TB) of information. It employs a technique known as collinear holography, whereby two lasers, one red and one blue-green, are collimated in a single beam. The blue-green laser reads data encoded as laser interference fringes from a holographic layer near the top of the disc while the red laser is used as the reference beam and to read servo information from a regular CD-style aluminium layer near the bottom. Servo information is used to monitor the position of the read head over the disc, similar to the head, track, and sector information on a conventional hard disk drive. On a CD or DVD this servo information is interspersed amongst the data.

A dichroic mirror layer between the holographic data and the servo data reflects the blue-green laser while letting the red laser pass through. This prevents interference from refraction of the blue-green laser off the servo data pits and is an advance over past holographic storage media, which either experienced too much interference, or lacked the servo data entirely, making them incompatible with current CD and DVD drive technology.[1] These discs have the capacity to hold up to 3.9 terabytes (TB) of information, which is approximately 5,500 times the capacity of a CD-ROM, 830 times the capacity of a DVD, 160 times the capacity of single-layer Blu-ray Discs, and about 7 times the capacity of standard computer hard drives as of 2007. The HVD also has a transfer rate of 1 gigabit/s (125 megabytes/s). Optware was expected to release a 200 GB disc in early June 2006, and Maxell in September 2006 with a capacity of 300 GB and transfer rate of 20 MB/s.[2] Since the announcement, there have been no further news or products on market.

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/3/38/Hvd_disc.jpg


Technology

Current optical storage saves one bit per pulse, and the HVD alliance hopes to improve this efficiency with capabilities of around 60,000 bits per pulse in an inverted, truncated cone shape that has a 200 micrometer diameter at the bottom and a 500 micrometer diameter at the top. High densities are possible by moving these closer on the tracks: 100 GB at 18 micrometers separation, 200 GB at 13 micrometers, 500 GB at 8 micrometers and a demonstrated maximum of 3.9 TB for 3 micrometer separation on a 12 cm disc.

The system uses green laser, with an output power of 1 watt, a high power for a consumer device laser. So a major challenge of the project for widespread consumer markets is to either improve the sensitivity of the polymer used, or develop and commoditize a laser capable of higher power output and suitable for a consumer unit

Storage capacity in context
It has been estimated that the books in the U.S. Library of Congress, one of the largest libraries in the world, would contain a total of about 20 terabytes if scanned in text format. Not including images from the books, the content could be stored with capacity to spare on six 3.9 TB discs.

* At 15 meter resolution and 32-bit color (about the resolution found in unpopulated areas on Google Earth), a map of the land masses of Earth would occupy just over 2 TB.
* Using MPEG4 ASP encoding, a 3.9 TB HVD could hold 4,600–11,900 hours of video—just over one year of uninterrupted video at usual encoding rates.[3]
* Using typical satellite radio encoding (CT-aacPlus at 40 kbit/s), a 3.9 TB HVD could hold over 26.5 years of uninterrupted stereo audio.

The transfer rate is at an average of 1 gigabyte/second, or 1024 megabytes/second, around 380 times the transfer rate for current 16x DVD storage.[4]

Competing technologies

HVD is not the only technology in next-generation, high-capacity optical storage media. InPhase Technologies has developed a holographic format they call Tapestry Media, capable of storing up to 1.6TB with a data transfer rate of 120 MB/s (960 Mbit). Hitachi Maxell, Ltd. has invested in InPhase Technologies and also announced that they have entered into a joint development agreement to further innovation in holographic media manufacturing (CDR Info). Such large optical storage capacities compete favorably with both HD DVD and Blu-ray Disc. However, the reader will cost around US$15,000, and a single disc will cost around US$120–180, but prices are expected to fall steadily.[5] The market for this format is not initially the common consumer, but enterprises with very large storage needs.

bangis ano!? babay na po DVD :hi:!

HELLO HVD! :praise:

iBee
11th Aug '07 Sat, 12:14
CD = 800 MB
DVD = 4+ GB
HVD = 4 TB?!

wow... pa'no mga HVD readers/writers? magkano naman aabutin nun :D

rentao_15
11th Aug '07 Sat, 12:23
4 terabites :wow: :shock: huwaw... ayos yan ah.... iba na talaga ang technology ngayon :yipee:

sandwich20m
11th Aug '07 Sat, 12:39
huwattttttttttttt? hahha sakto ung :naughty: ni jov dyan hahhaa

Lovely Face
11th Aug '07 Sat, 23:12
malufet.outdated na naman ang dvd....

Nadec23-7
12th Aug '07 Sun, 00:51
grabe lupit!!pero kaso mahal yan pag binili..:weep:

mabhin17
14th Aug '07 Tue, 00:03
available naba yan?hehe

OhNow3P
14th Aug '07 Tue, 00:42
eto pala kelangan ko e... kaso siguro mahal kaya walng balita... matagal pa lalabas to... DVD nga ngayon-ngayon lang nauso pero 1995 pa tapos na development...

sh|n|gam|
14th Aug '07 Tue, 01:06
3.9Tb??? Ni hindi pa nga ako umaabot sa 800Gb e. Lalangoy lang lahat ng back-up data ko dyan.

Imagine na lang ang impact nyan sa files natin. Ilang mp3, anime, at seasons ng mga palabas kaya laman nyan?

Redge
14th Aug '07 Tue, 11:49
san pwede bumili nyan :D

vandike
2nd Oct '07 Tue, 16:24
nyay.. imagine all d AZ movies dyan!!! ahahaha...

ayangko
2nd Oct '07 Tue, 21:29
siguro darating ang time na di na naten maririnig yung "de-be-de, de-be-de!" sa mga bangketa.. kase me bago na: "ets-be-de, ets-be-de!" Hehe.. :)

leomclay
2nd Oct '07 Tue, 22:31
mga tol meron naba sa market nito? ang alam ko na available sa market ngayon eh Blue Ray Disc nakakita ako sa mall dito sa U.A.E ang capacity is 25GB pa lang. Ito din ang disc na gamit ng Wii at PS3 imagine ang laki ng agwat nila pag dating sa capacity. isa lang tanong dyan kung meron ng ganitong technology tumagal pa kaya sa market ang Blue Ray Disc? nakakatakot bumili ng BR Disc kung di lang din pla magtatagal like Laser Disc, and Zip drive.

leomclay
2nd Oct '07 Tue, 22:35
tol ano bang latest news about HVD? kaylan ang release nito? or na release na? plano kasi bumili ng mga tropa ko ng Laptop na supported ang Blue Ray Disc imagine ang mahal nung laptop na may ganitong technology about P100K eh kung meron na talaga nito nakakahinayang naman bumili ng BR Disc?