Magnetic fields are pretty nifty for levitating stuff, carving sponge-like thingamajigs and, of course, data storage. But an international team led by the University of York in the UK has figured out a way to replace magnetic fields for the latter by using ultra-short heat pulses instead. Conventional thinking typically dictates that an external magnetic field is required to store data on a magnetic medium. By using heat, however, researchers were able to record terabytes of information per second in a way that is also more energy-efficient compared to current hard drive technology. As for the time it'll take for the tech to make it to market, well, we have a feeling it won't be as fast.
More here.
Cool..
ReplyDeleteGreat news! Magnetic drive speed's quite something!
ReplyDeleteWow! That's some crazy fast transfers. If this gets cheaper, I hope the savings will trickle down to the end user.
ReplyDeleteWith Moore's law I wonder what's going to be coming.
ReplyDeleteThat's amazing!
ReplyDeleteI thought the way of the future was clearly Solid State drives, But if this is true then Optical drives will probably stick around for another few years.
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