IBM hits new high in data storage
IBM hits new high in data storage
In five years you will be able to fit text from 8 million books into a cartridge half the size of a VHS tape.

Boston: Researchers at International Business Machines Corp. say a new method for cramming data onto magnetic tape will increase storage capacity at least 15 times.

This means that text from 8 million books could be squeezed onto a cartridge half the size of a VHS tape.

Scientists at IBM's Almaden Research Center in San Jose, Calif., planned to announce on Tuesday that they have invented a process for stuffing 6.67 billion bits into a square inch of tape and 8 terabytes, roughly 8 trillion bytes, on a single cartridge.

They contend that would be 15 to 20 times denser than today's industry-standard tape products.

IBM worked with Fuji Photo Film Co. to change the material that makes up the tape, and also improved the way data can be read and written.

Customers interested in the new tape technology, which is expected to be on the market in about five years,would need to upgrade to new machines.

Also, while each new generation of tape machine traditionally can read cartridges based on the two previous standards, there are no guarantees.

Consequently, customers will have to re-record old data onto the new tapes to ensure those files remain accessible well into the future, said David Reine, an analyst with the Clipper Group.

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