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Topic: "Breakthrough" - IBM And Fujifilm Develop New Magnetic Tape With 580TB Capacity (Read 72 times)

sr. member
Activity: 2618
Merit: 439
Holy Cow,  580TB in single tool?

While i am struggling Carrying my Storages Limiting to 2 TB per items so i need to have 2-3 if ever needed in  office .


Wish one day , this will be available in my place but cheaper value of course  Grin
legendary
Activity: 3906
Merit: 1373
The NSA will love this.


"Breakthrough" - IBM And Fujifilm Develop New Magnetic Tape With 580TB Capacity



By 2025, worldwide data could soar to 175 zettabytes, representing 61% annual growth.

Thanks to the virus pandemic, the rapid digitization of the economy sparking a massive push in remote working among corporations have also resulted in a massive increase in data storage.

So, where is all this data being stored?

More than 500 hyperscale data centers are scattered across the world, storing an estimated 547 exabytes with an estimated 151 facilities currently under development.

According to IBM, there is only "one technology can handle that the massive growth of digital data, keep it protected from cybercrime attacks and is archiving data for some of the largest hyperscale data centers in the world is a technology more than 60 years old – magnetic tape."

Magnetic Tape's Layer Structure

More than a decade ago, IBM partnered with Fujifilm to advance the technology in magnetic tape. What they developed is a new tape that can store huge amounts of critical data.

The new tape can achieve a storage capacity of 317 gigabytes per square inch, which means a single tape is capable of storing 580 terabytes of data.

Putting 580 terabytes into perspective for readers, it's "equivalent to 786,977 CDs stacked 944 meters high, which is taller than Burj Kalifa, the world's tallest building. That's a colossal amount of data! All fitting on a tape cartridge on the palm of your hand," said IBM.


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