www.armstrongeconomics.com
Data storage is rapidly shrinking. Now, a team of nanoscientists led
by Sander Otte at Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands has
just announced the densest method ever developed to store re-writable
digital data. The method of moving around individual chlorine atoms on a
flat sheet of copper can write a 1 kilobyte message at 500 terabits per
square inch. Well, for those unfamiliar with these computer
measurements, that is about 100 times more info per square inch than the
most efficient hard drive can store.
So, the NSA just spent a lot of money on that huge facility to store
everyone’s text and phone calls for life, but it could have been 100
times smaller. With this method, you could theoretically fit every book
ever written onto a flat copper sheet the size of a postage stamp. The
new storage device was outlined in the journal, “Nature Nanotechnology.”
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