IBM has announced a new
technique for storing data on magnetic tape that increases the capacity of the
media by up to 15 times.
Researchers at IBM's
Almaden Research
Centre in California managed to cram 6.67 billion bits onto each square inch
of tape, a dramatic improvement on current techniques.
In time the team expects to be able to store eight terabytes of information
on a tape half the size of a video cassette.
"This demonstration confirms IBM's continued leadership in magnetic tape
technology," said Spike Narayan, senior manager of advanced technology concepts
at IBM Almaden.
"This is a major milestone in our programme and gives magnetic tape the
density boost that we gave hard-disk drives in the 1990s."
The researchers made the breakthrough by using a new kind of double sided
tape developed by Fuji, and a new kind of recording head developed for use with
micro-drives.
IBM's first commercial tape product, the
726
Magnetic Tape Unit, was announced 54 years ago next week. It used reels of
half-inch wide tape that each had a capacity of a mind-boggling 2MB.
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