Please create an account to participate in the Slashdot moderation system

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror

Comment Re:That's just stupid (Score 1) 127

Just in case you didn't catch this below, play it again Sam... Speaking from bitter experience... just about any reporter can make even the smartest person sound as dumb as a post. Sensational headlines are more interesting than idle speculation. Yes, this new technology involves the use of "nanowires on demand" but the surrounding electronics are pretty-much living in the now (transistors and the like). So it might be "nanotechnology" but its not all that. Interestingly, people have made real chips with this nanowire memory stuff on board - Qimonda and Sony come up in my digging - although the capacity is waaaaaaay (waaaaaaaaaay) lower than terabyte thumb drives/disc drives/anything you can buy now. The good(?) news is that these companies have shown that both MLC (two bits per cell as in 00,01,10,11) and multiple layers are at least feasible and this "suggests" that the kind of densities you would need to do a solid state drive are not unattainable (unless I was not incorrectly misinformed). Triple negatives aside, I think we are going to see a lot more activity in solid state storage from the disc drive makers, especially now that the Evil Empire (aka Samsung) has started pushing out Flash-based laptop storage.
Data Storage

Submission + - Nanotech to replace disk drives in 10 years? (computerworld.com)

Ian Lamont writes: "An Arizona State University researcher named Michael Kozicki claims that nanotechnology will replace disk drives in ten years. The article mentions three approaches: Nanowires (which replace electrons/capacitors), multiple memory layers on silicon (instead of a single layer), and a method that stores multiple pieces of information in the same space: "Traditionally, each cell holds one bit of information. However, instead of storing simply a 0 or a 1, that cell could hold a 00 or a 01. Kozicki said the ability to double capacity that way — without increasing the number of cells — has already been proven. Now researchers are working to see how many pieces of data can be held by a single cell.""

Slashdot Top Deals

How many hardware guys does it take to change a light bulb? "Well the diagnostics say it's fine buddy, so it's a software problem."

Working...