Good thing I never replaced most of my 8-tracks with CDs, huh?



At 11:37 PM 11/12/03 -0600, Robert Seeberger wrote:
http://www.ananova.com/news/story/sm_837803.html?menu=news.latestheadlines

Compact discs could be history within five years, superseded by a new
generation of fingertip-sized memory tabs with no moving parts.

Scientists say each paper-thin device could store more than a gigabyte of
information - equivalent to 1,000 high quality images - in one cubic
centimetre of space.

Experts have developed the technology by melding together organic and
inorganic materials in a unique way.

They say it could be used to produce a single-use memory card that
permanently stores data and is faster and easier to operate than a CD.

It's claimed that turning the invention into a commercially viable product
might take as little as five years.

The card would not involve any moving parts, such as the laser and motor
drive required by compact discs. Its secret is the discovery of a previously
unknown property of a commonly-used conductive plastic coating.

US scientists at Princeton University, New Jersey, and computer giants
Hewlett-Packard combined the polymer with very thin-film, silicon-based
electronics.

The device would be like a standard CD-R (CD-recordable) disc in that
writing data onto it makes permanent changes and can only be done once. But
it would also resemble a computer memory chip, because it would plug
directly into an electronic circuit and have no moving parts.

A report in the journal Nature described how the researchers identified a
new property of a polymer called PEDOT.

PEDOT, which is clear and conducts electricity, has been used for years as
an anti-static coating on photographic film. Researchers looked at ways of
using PEDOT to store digital information. In the new memory card, data in
the form of ones and zeroes would be represented by polymer pixels.

When information is recorded, higher voltages at certain points in the
circuit grid would "blow" the PEDOT fuses at those points. As a result, data
is permanently etched into the device. A blown fuse would from then on be
read as a zero, while an unblown one that lets current pass through is read
as a one.



xponent

New News Maru

rob


_______________________________________________ http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l

-- Ronn! :)


_______________________________________________
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l

Reply via email to