Live Science on MSN
Microsoft can now store data for 10,000 years on everyday glass thanks to laser breakthrough
Improvements to the data writing and reading techniques, alongside a new way to store data, mean the technology is more ...
Researchers use mini plasma explosions to encode the equivalent of two million books into a coaster-sized device. The method ...
New Scientist on MSN
Data centres could store information in glass for thousands of years
Microsoft researchers have developed a technology that writes data into glass with lasers, raising the prospect of robotic ...
Borosilicate glass offers extreme stability; Microsoft’s accelerated aging experiments suggest the data would be stable for ...
Researchers say a palm-sized piece of glass could store the equivalent of 2 million books for over 10,000 years.
Since the dawn of the computer age, researchers have wrestled with two persistent challenges: how to store ever-increasing ...
Engineered DNA can store massive amounts of data while also encrypting it, opening the door to ultra-secure, long-term ...
As data keeps exploding worldwide, scientists are racing to pack more information into smaller and smaller spaces — and a team at the University of Stuttgart may have just unlocked a powerful new ...
In this new construct, storage is now the foundational data conductor, and organizations that treat storage as "just there" will watch their AI ambitions—and their budgets—collapse under the weight of ...
Pure Storage’s recent launch of its Enterprise Data Cloud reignited debate around storage and data management. Pure claims its EDC addresses the management of growing volumes of data in a complex ...
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