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  1. Holographic Memory by Askar Akaevich Akaev, Simon Borisovich Gurevich, et all 1997-11

41. Data Storage -data Storage
drives, backup software, storageTek, email archiving storageTech, hardware and software onlinedata storage 2. free data storage 3. holographic data storage 4
http://www.datastoragesearch.com/qry/data storage/
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Storage Systems - StorageTek
As a global leader in the data storage industry, StorageTek delivers reliable tape and disk storage
data storage data
recovery software, backup tape drives, backup software, StorageTek, StorageTech, hard disk drive, disk storage , tape backup, tape libraries, storage area network, SAN, Storage Area Network, fibre...
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Data
storage hardware and software products - Overland Storage
Overland data storage products include tape drives, libraries, loaders, and storage management soft
...Overland data storage products include tape drives, libraries, loaders, and storage management software for data backup and data storage objectives. data storage , hardware, software, storage management, backup, back up... http://www.overlanddata.com/products_landing.html 11kb Cached 1530 More ] modified Nov 25 2002 - indexed Dec 11 2002 Data Storage Plus! Index

42. Baker Library Industry Guide Computer Hardware Components
Standard Poor's Industry Surveys Computers hardware Vol. html Covers topicssuch as mobile devices, MEMs, PDAs, holographic storage, FAB production and
http://www.library.hbs.edu/industry/hardware-overviews.htm

43. Electronic Storage Media
21, 1995 Koichi Sadashige Data storage Technology Assessment 2000 Part 1. CurrentState and NearTerm Projections for hardware Technology. holographic storage.
http://palimpsest.stanford.edu/bytopic/electronic-records/electronic-storage-med
Electronic Storage Media
See also

44. Hardware Section Article Two
worldwide are working on holographic storage technologies once When this storagebecomes practical, perhaps within Here's How Mac News hardware News At
http://www.samara.co.zw/pcworld/hardware.htm
Online Sales
Epson Digital Cameras
Epson Printers Epson Scanners Honey, I Shrunk the Bits! - ...
Scan, Print, and Copy with Lexmark
Honey, I Shrunk the Bits! Removable Storage Gets (Really) Small
Well, maybe bits don't shrink, but the size of the media storing them certainly has. Racing to fit more memory into everything from laptops to PDAs to MP3 players to digital cameras, vendors are squeezing ever-larger capacity into ever-smaller packages. Several new products continue to up the ante, but an overabundance of standards threatens mass confusion. Tight-on-space notebook users can get a boost from Toshiba's new MK2001MPL Plug-n-Play PC Card hard drive. The 4200-rpm drive holds 2GB of data, and even greater capacities are in the wings. If you want a small external drive, check Flotec's new 5-by-3-by-0.5-inch Pockey. Connecting via USB, the Pockey installs like a charm. Our test Pockey seemed sturdy, but all hard drives should be handled with care. LaCie markets the PocketDrive, a similar but pricier product with both USB and fast FireWire connectivity, in 10GB to 30GB models.

45. Vnunet.com IBM Develops Holographic Storage Technology
landscape http//www.itweek.co.uk /Specials/1102653 0506-2000 Forums Discuss'IBM develops holographic storage technology' in the Business hardware forum.
http://www.itweek.co.uk/News/106128
Tuesday 08 April 2003
Select here vnunet.com home Site map News centre Products centre Downloads centre Advice centre Careers Centre Ebusiness Security Business hardware Business software Communications Personal computing Gaming Business centre Eshopper Forums Competitions Hot topics Analysis Mole Last 7 days news Search archive Registration Tools Newsletters vnunet Wap Edition vnunet Pocket Edition Readers to the Rescue forum Compare prices Research library Accountancy Age Computeractive Computing Computer Reseller News Financial Director Infomatics IT Week Management Consultancy Personal Computer World PC Magazine Webactive What PC VNU advertiser information Magazine subscriptions AccountancyAge.com IT lists IT directories Learned Information Europe Ltd vnu one to one Contacts vnumedia.co.uk Privacy statement
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IBM develops holographic storage technology By Cath Everett in Silicon Valley IBM is developing holographic storage technology, which it claims will be able to store a copy of every Hollywood film for each of the world's six billion people.
IBM is developing holographic storage technology, which it claims will be able to store a copy of every Hollywood film for each of the world's six billion people.

46. Current Awareness Abstracts
S Computer hardware. 981469 The iMac not quite cool enough. 98-1470Crystal vision (holographic storage). 98-1471 Huge Hard Disks.
http://www.aslib.co.uk/caa/1998/nov/s.html
November
S: Computer hardware
Current subscribers to the hard copy version of Current Awareness Abstracts have been sent a personalised password enabling them to access the full text of the abstracts below. Non-subscribers are invited to view abstracts from the issues of the journal. If you would like more information about subscriptions to Current Awareness Abstracts , please email us at pubs@aslib.co.uk

47. CDR-Info, The Recording Authority
the leader in holographic data storage development, today Technologies to demonstrate TAPESTRY , first holographic Video recording More hardware Reviews
http://www.cdrinfo.com/Sections/News/Details.asp?index=1204

48. Disk Storage - A CompInfo Directory
drive industry., including CDROM, DVD, hard disk drives, holographic storage, opticalcards, and disk drive standards. storageReview.com (hardware Research, LLC
http://www.compinfo.co.uk/stor/disk_storage.htm
CompInfo - The Computer Information Center
The top one-stop reference resource for corporate IT, computers and communications
Millions of IT users world-wide rely on our Web-based support resources
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Disk Storage - Outline Topic Outline KnowledgeBases Newsgroups and FAQs Magazines and Ezines ... Key Training Providers Disk Storage - Knowledge Bases

49. SearchWebServices.com
Digital Data storage b. virtual memory c. holographic storage d. optical disk storage. allowpersonal computers to communicate with peripheral hardware such as
http://searchwebservices.techtarget.com/originalContent/0,289142,sid26_gci838278
Search our content and thousands of pre-screened web sites. Advanced Search More headlines E-mail a friend Quiz #26: Storage Smarts
By Whatis.com
09 Jul 2002, SearchWebServices
How to take the quiz:

- After reading the question, click on the answer that you think is correct to go to the whatis.com definition. If the answer you've chosen is correct, you will see the question text somewhere in the definition.
OR
- After reading the question, write down the letter of your answer choice on scrap paper. Check your answers by using the answer key at the end of the quiz.
This is a general term for all forms of solid state memory that have a continuous source of power and do not need to have their memory contents periodically refreshed.
a. flash memory
b. random access memory
c. volatile memory
d. nonvolatile memory This type of data storage uses laser beams to store computer-generated data in three dimensions. The goal is to store a lot of data in a little bit of space. a. Digital Data Storage b. virtual memory c. holographic storage d.

50. Termini.lv - Terminu Vārdnīca
hardware monitor. hardware profile. hardware reliability. hardware security. hardwiredconnection. hash function. hit. hit rate. holographic storage. holy war. home brew.
http://www.termini.lv/index.php?terms=H*@EN

51. Holodisks.com: Holographic Videos
holographic data storage and retrieval systems.Category Computers hardware storage Optical...... medium. During that time, hardware advances carried out independentof holography have made holographic storage more achievable. .
http://www.holodisks.com/
Free Web site hosting - Freeservers.com
HOLODISKS: HOLOGRAPHIC DATA STORAGE MEDIA Holodisks are three-dimensional holographic data storage media with Gb+/sec access speed and 200+Gb capacity. BREAKING THE "SURFACE BARRIER" OF TWO-DIMENSIONAL MEDIA There have been significant improvements in the data storage capacity and access speed of two-dimensional media (such as magnetic disks, optical CDs, and optical DVDs) during the past decade. Advances such as blue laser technology will enable some additional improvements in data density per surface area. However, applications such as high-definition television, three-dimensional display of medical images, defense and aerospace applications, and virtual reality environments will have a voracious appetite for data storage capacity and access speed. These applications are likely to outstrip the incremental advances possible with two-dimensional data media. To satisfy the data capacity and access requirements of these new applications, memory systems must break "the surface barrier" and move into three-dimensional data storage and access. Holographic memory systems are the most promising of the three-dimensional systems under development. HOW DO HOLOGRAPHIC MEMORY SYSTEMS RECORD DATA?

52. Hardware Reviews - CNET.com
06/14/02 Beyond DVD holographic storage Someday, this emerging storage technologycould hardware Weekly Cool Gear Weekly, Shopper Desktops Notebooks
http://att.cnet.com/hardware/0-8144467.html

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53. Beyond DVD: Holographic Storage - Tech Trends - CNET.com
In hardware. CNET Tech Trends Beyond DVD holographic storage, By Clair Whitmer(6/14/02). Say the phrase holographic data storage out loud.
http://att.cnet.com/techtrends/0-6014-8-20013825-1.html

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Tech Trends Beyond DVD: holographic storage
By Clair Whitmer
Say the phrase holographic data storage out loud. What's the first thing that comes to mind? Is it Princess Leia, the little picture on your credit card, or cheesy art galleries? Forget about them. Those associations are only part of the image problem that a Boulder, Colorado, company backed by Lucent will have to overcome. InPhase Technologies seeks to be the first real commercial player in an industry that some think will eventually replace DVDand that many others think is probably a pipe dream. Background on a fearless leader
How InPhase Technologies is gambling on what some call science fiction. The whys and hows of holographic storage
Why you will someday need it and the science behind it. The InPhase plan
Why this company believes it will be the first to market a holographic data-storage system. Extra: stretching the storage of today's DVDs
We outline the optical storage industry's next moves to increase capacityyep, we mean Blu-ray. Who would dare to bank on holographic storage?

54. Technology Review Other Hardware
holographic Memory How holographic data storage works. 7 Startups OEwaves Lightwavetimekeeper for faster networks. Innovation Speedy Delivery hardware.
http://www.techreview.com/articles/comcomhar.asp
Subscribe Renew Customer Service Premium Content ... FREE NEWSLETTER TOPICS Biotech Business Computing Energy ...
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Other Hardware
OTHER TOPICS Computer Science Microprocessors Networking Other Hardware TOP FEATURE Prototype
Straight from the lab: technology's first draft. FEATURES View All Virtual Keyboards Approach Reality
All-optical keyboards put typists in touch with their handheld devices. Data Extinction
It's too late for old word-processing files. But new technologies will preserve access to digital photos, music and other electronic records forever. Visualize: Magnetic Random-Access Memory
Take a tour through a magnetic random-access memory cell. The Thousand-Leg Race
The battlefield is small but the stakes are big, as computer giants chase a revolutionary nano-storage technology. Trailing Edge: Tiny Bubbles
Desktop printing was revolutionized by a misplaced soldering iron. Visualize: Holographic Memory
How holographic data storage works.
7 Startups: OEwaves
Light-wave timekeeper for faster networks. Innovation: Speedy Delivery Hardware Prototype: Denser Disks Prototype: Keyboard Rollups All articles TOPIC REPORTS Display Technologies 2002 Whether it's wired or wireless, 2D or 3D, Technology Review examines what we're most likely so see nextand when.

55. PhysicsWeb - Optical Data Storage Enters A New Dimension
contentaddressable holographic data storage an inherent comparison, an appropriatelydesigned holographic system built Custom-built hardware could reduce this
http://physicsweb.org/article/world/13/7/7

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Feature: July 2000 Holographic data storage promises increased storage densities and improved access times that could lead to a new range of novel memory devices IN THE era of the Internet, massive amounts of information and multimedia have become easily accessible in every corner of the world. The decreasing cost of storing data, and the increasing storage capacities of ever smaller devices, have been key enablers of this revolution. Current storage needs are being met because improvements in conventional technologies - such as magnetic hard-disk drives, optical disks and semiconductor memories - have been able to keep pace with the demand for greater and faster storage.
1 How holograms work
However, there is strong evidence that these surface-storage technologies are approaching fundamental limits that may be difficult to overcome as the ever-smaller regions that store bits of information become less thermally stable and harder to access. Exactly when this limit will be reached remains an open question: some experts predict these barriers will be encountered in 2-3 years, while others believe they will not be reached for at least another five years. In either case, one or more successors to current data-storage technologies will be needed in the near future.

56. New Hard-Drive Tech Overcomes Magnetic Memory Problems
With technologies like holographic optical storage Supersize IT From Megabytesto Petabytes (26Aug-02) Ultimate storage hardware (23-Aug-02) IBM Unveils New
http://sci.newsfactor.com/perl/story/19209.html
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By Jay Lyman
NewsFactor Network
August 28, 2002
Seagate researchers now believe they can store as much as 50 terabits per square inch equivalent to the entire printed contents of the Library of Congress on a single disk drive for a notebook computer.
In This Story:

To Terabit and Beyond

Magnetic Stays Mainstream

Related Stories
Hard-drive maker Seagate said it has overcome a significant challenge in magnetic memory with a new technology capable of achieving far beyond today's storage densities up to as great as 50 terabits per square inch. Currently, the highest storage densities hover around 50 gigabits per square inch, but Seagate said its heat-assisted magnetic recording (HAMR) technology could break through the so-called superparamagnetic limit a memory boundary based on data bits so small they become magnetically unstable. By heating the memory medium with a laser-generated beam at the precise spot where data bits are being recorded, HAMR dramatically increases density and substantially improves the outlook for magnetic recording, according to Seagate. The need for higher storage density the number of data bits stored on a disk surface already has been addressed with smaller bits, but these data chunks are becoming so small that they will be magnetically unstable within the next five to 10 years, researchers said. "HAMR is designed, in part, to overcome the paramagnetism limit," Seagate spokesperson John Paulsen told NewsFactor, adding that the technology will be incorporated in products between five and 10 years from now.

57. IBM Research Press Releases Holography
The HDSS project took the next step developing the other hardware technologies neededfor practical holographic data storage systems and integrating them into
http://domino.watson.ibm.com/Comm/bios.nsf/pages/holography.html

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IBM Research Holographic Data Storage at IBM's Almaden Research Center
Interim Page - Do not publish or distribute links to this page or links to underlying files.
Get DEMON II image zip file

Note: Image is CMYK, convert to RGB for web use
DEMON II IBM Research's test platform for holographic data storage
Pictured is Geoffrey Burr, research staff member, IBM Research's Almaden Research Center (San Jose, Calif.) and the "DEMON II" test platform, which was built to explore high density holographic data storage under the DARPA-sponsored HDSS consortium. Burr and colleagues used Demon-II to demonstrate an areal density 80 times higher than a DVD optical disk. (The IBM result is 254 Gbits/ sq. inch, or 394 bits/sq. micron. DVD single-layer density is 3.0Gbits/sq.inch or 4.7bits/sq.micron.) This density corresponds to about 1 percent of the theoretical limit in volumetric density for holographic storage of one bit per cubic wavelength.
In the lower right corner, a 30mm-diameter beam is directed up and onto a spatial-light modulator (right) with 1 million pixels, each representing a data bit. This data-bearing object beam then enters the holographic data storage crystal (center), where it meets the narrow reference beam entering from lower left. Data is stored when the interference pattern created by the two beams changes the optical properties of the crystal within the overlap region. Multiple holograms can be stored in the same volume by varying the angles of the beams. For readout, a reference beam projected into the crystal selectively reconstructs according to its input angle only one of the 1,000 superimposed holograms, producing the appropriate data-bearing object beam, which can be detected by the CCD camera (left).

58. Network Computing Tech Library: Multimedia Development
report on the current status of holographic technology. January 23, 2001 Type WhitePaper storage is seen $7000.00, EDigital Media hardware Market Share 1999
http://networkcomputing.bitpipe.com/data/rlist?t=soft_10_90_40&orgtypegrp=ALL

59. Europtics
modulators. Applications to the holographic devices and storage. The queueing.hardware implementation of ATM switching architectures.
http://www.enspm.u-3mrs.fr/europtics/programme.htm

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60. PAWS'96 Draft Recommendations
and implications for application specific reconfigurable hardware accelerators/co ofpotential and approach to holographic optical storage for reducing
http://www.hq.nasa.gov/hpcc/petaflops/petasoft96/paws.outcome/recommend.html
DRAFT Recommendations
Petaflops Architecture WorkShop
Oxnard, California
April 22-25, 1996 by: Dr. Thomas Sterling, Senior Staff Scientist
Center of Excellence in Space Data and Information Sciences
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
RECOMMENDATIONS
The Petaflops Architecture WorkShop identified many critical areas in which advances can and should be made to enhance our understanding of potential approaches and reduce the risk to achieving petaflops computing capability in the earlierst possible time frame. While a large number of specific possible activities were considered, a few were recognized as key to overall progress or appropriate for immediate action. The following section highlights the most significant recommendations. Section 2 presents a few important actions that can be undertaken immediately and would have important consequences for this emerging discipline. Finally, Section 3 provides details of many additional recommendations, most of which are rather specific but which should be performed at some point in the near future.
1.0 MAJOR RECOMMENDATIONS

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