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Sony announced it has created a cassette tape that smashes a previous record for data storage. The Japanese company says its new tape is capable of holding 185 terabytes, or 148 gigabits per ...
Sony might not even turn this technology into a product that'll see the light of day. You'll find the magnetic tape Sony has created this month to be able to hold 148GB per inch. Rolled up into ...
Sony has announced plans to go commercial with the tape and continue experimenting and pushing the development technique further. While this is really incredible, and there’s the potential for ...
At the INTERMAG Europe 2014 international magnetics conference in Dresden, Sony announced a new breakthrough in magnetic tape technology that keeps the medium relevant by allowing a tape cartridge ...
Sony's new method means you could cram 185TB onto a single cassette tape. The average Blu-Ray disc holds 50GB and a standard PC hard drive 1TB. To illustrate just how dramatic this is ...
Sony has developed a magnetic tape material that can store data at 148 gigabits per square inch, roughly 74 times the density of standard tapes. The technology represents the world’s highest ...
The only catch is that it uses a storage technique that you probably thought was long dead: magnetic tape. The partnership between IBM and Sony has resulted in a new type of magnetic tape storage ...
Because the stakes are high and tape is being pushed to its boundaries, Sony Optical Archive has developed an optical library that can hold up to 181PB in a single system (4 of which can be tied ...
IBM and Sony have developed a new magnetic tape system capable of storing 201 gigabits of data per square inch, for a max theoretical capacity of 330 terabytes in a single palm-sized cartridge.