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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. |
PC World July 24, 2002 Tom Spring |
What Has Your Floppy Drive Done for You Lately? PC makers are still standing by floppy drives despite vanishing consumer demand. |
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. |
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. |
CIO October 15, 2000 Sara Shay |
Disk Jockeying Certainly the 3.5-inch colorful plastic squares that today represent the majority of floppies in circulation don't appear to fit the description implied by their moniker, but the name refers to what came before, and what still lies beneath... |
InternetNews January 4, 2008 Judy Mottl |
Victory For Flash as Hitachi Cans Tiny Hard Disks Hitachi is kissing production of its smallest hard drive disks goodbye, citing poor sales and the increasing shift to flash technology when it comes to demand for mobile device storage. |
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. |
PC World March 6, 2002 Martyn Williams |
Driving the Future of Hard Disks Industry group unveils plans for a removable hard disk system, designed for PCs and other devices... |
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. |
InternetNews December 11, 2007 |
Toshiba Joins Solid-State Notebook Drive Push Chip maker Toshiba Corp. said on Monday it would make flash-based solid state drives for notebook PCs, as it seeks to create new sources of demand for flash memory chips. |
PC Magazine October 11, 2006 |
Defragment Floppy Disks Windows XP Disk Defragmenter won't handle a floppy disk. |
IEEE Spectrum January 2007 Willie D. Jones |
You Tell Us: Is It a Mirage or Is It Holographic Storage? The idea of using holograms to store data on computers has tantalized engineers since the 1960s, and now it finally looks like it's going to market. |
PC Magazine July 13, 2004 Jeremy A. Kaplan |
High-Definition DVD Blu-Ray and HD-DVD go head to head. |
PC Magazine May 3, 2006 Sebastian Rupley |
Data in 3D Holographic storage is coming out of the labs. Will it soon go mainstream? |
InternetNews December 1, 2009 |
McAfee Tackles Portable Device Threats Security software maker looks to lock down portable USB drives and mobile devices. |
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. |
InternetNews July 23, 2010 |
What Keeps SSD From Replacing Spinning Disks Flash is faster, cooler and uses less power, but there's one little problem that keeps it from ever really replacing spinning disks. |
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 World April 2004 Harry McCracken |
Up Front: DVD--Hot Today, Hassles Tomorrow? Burn, everybody, burn! But get ready for headaches with new technologies. |
PC World October 2004 Tom Spring |
Tiny Drives With Big Brains Having basically replaced floppy disks as the portable media of choice for small amounts of PC data, USB flash drives are pursuing more widespread adoption. |
InternetNews December 27, 2005 David Needle |
Pioneer Set for Blu-ray Delivery Pioneer Electronics announced today it expects to ship one of the first Blu-ray drives in the first quarter of 2006. |
PC World February 5, 2003 Tom Mainelli |
Dell Drops Floppy Drives in New PCs Future Dimension 8250 desktops will offer floppy drives as an option -- alongside thumb drives. |
PC Magazine August 16, 2006 John C. Dvorak |
Inside Track v25n15 Over the past 50 years, the amount of data that can be crammed onto one inch of disk space has increased by a factor of 50 million. Now that's something to celebrate on the hard drive's 50th birthday. |
InternetNews September 2, 2005 Clint Boulton |
Big Storage For Hitachi's Small Drives Smartphones, iPods, and handheld computers should get a boost with Hitachi's Slim and Mikey. Despite their small size, Hitachi's new offerings have the storage capacity of larger drives. They also protect against falls. |
InternetNews January 8, 2008 Gene Hirschel |
Hitachi's 'Monster' of a Disk Monster-sized laptop now possible with introduction of new Laptop disk by Hitachi. |
The Motley Fool April 18, 2007 Dan Bloom |
Seagate Suffers a Setback Competition and weak demand in a few product lines take their toll on the data storage company. Investors, take note. |
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. |
Macworld August 2004 Kristina De Nike |
LaCie USB Pocket Floppy 4x Portable USB drive gives your floppies one last gasp. |
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. |
The Motley Fool November 30, 2011 Tierney Plumb |
I Was Wrong About HD-DVDs Blu-ray won the battle, even as regular old DVDs hang around. |
PC Magazine June 8, 2005 John R. Quain |
A New Dimension in Storage InPhase Technologies' prototype drive packs 300GB of data on one disc. |
InternetNews August 9, 2007 Henry Newman |
Xbox, PS3 and Wii: The Future of Storage Just like the PC dominated the 1990s, gaming will become the dominant technology of the future. |
PC World August 2003 Christopher Null |
Mega Storage to Go There's a new removable storage option for every job, from key chain-size USB drives to humongous external hard disks. We examine 15 portable, affordable contenders. |
The Motley Fool March 7, 2011 Tim Beyers |
As the Hard Drive Market Teeters, Western Digital Pounces A $4.3 billion deal for Hitachi could alter the balance of power |
PC World September 2001 Sean Captain |
Hard Drives: 100GB & Larger Desktop drives have reached 100GB, and larger models are waiting in the wings, but technical limits stand in the way... |
Bank Technology News October 2009 John Adams |
A Good Kind of Disruption The latest advancements to hit solid-state drives are earning raves as a potential slayer of transaction latency, but the innovation also comes with a green thumb. |
PC Magazine August 30, 2006 Robert Lemos |
Gone in a Flash Stop your employees from infecting your systems or pocketing your company's intellectual property. |
Entrepreneur September 2007 Amanda C. Kooser |
Watch and Burn The ultimate write-off? A high-capacity HD or Blu-ray DVD burner. |
InternetNews April 23, 2007 Clint Boulton |
Hitachi Goes For Big in Small Form Hitachi trots out its first 2.5-inch disk drive in pursuit of Seagate and Fujitsu. |
InternetNews December 29, 2004 Marty Foltyn |
A Peek Into the 2005 Enterprise Storage Goody Bag An interview with conference organizer Tom Coughlin offering a glimpse of the content storage advances to be revealed at the Storage Visions 2005 conference. |
T.H.E. Journal March 2006 |
Data Storage: Products for Schools A Sacramento County technology director understands what it takes to keep a district's data in great shape. |
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. |
InternetNews February 25, 2004 Clint Boulton |
Hitachi Revving 300 Gigabyte Hard Drive Hitachi Global Storage Technologies Wednesday unveiled the first 300 gigabyte hard disk drive for storing enterprise-level data, a move that increases the stakes for competitors in the server hardware sector. |
The Motley Fool January 24, 2005 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
Goodbye to DVDs DVDs will be replaced by HD-DVD or Blu-ray discs. While you may find yourself making a decision as a consumer later this year, you probably want to know whether there's anything in it for you as an investor. |
PC World October 2003 Melissa J. Perenson |
MIA: Top-Speed DVD Media Faster drives, but where are the discs? |
The Motley Fool June 29, 2006 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
Will Blu-ray Prove Red-Hot? Sony's rival format enters the high-definition home video battle. Investors may want to rethink their priorities before they pay up for a player that will likely drop precipitously in price, the way high-def television sets have in recent years. |
PC World May 2001 Kirk Steers |
Create Your Own Emergency Boot Disk Create an emergency boot disk, identify mysterious components... |
The Motley Fool April 20, 2005 Rich Duprey |
A Blu-ray Compromise? Is Sony really ready to give in on the next generation of DVD formats? |
InternetNews October 20, 2005 Clint Boulton |
Can Blu-ray, HD-DVD Meet in The Middle? Blu-ray supporter Hewlett Packard asks the Blu-ray Disc Association to support technologies that underpin competing HD-DVD format. |
PC Magazine October 19, 2004 John C. Dvorak |
Suspicious Battle Dept. The Blu-ray disc standard continues to battle with the HD-DVD standards in the back alleys of Asia... Microsoft is in some other dimension when it suggests that users are having trouble finding data among "hundreds" of files... |