Resume Design and Implementation of an Embedded hardware Module for Secure for 2D storage channels such as volume holographic storage channel and multi-track http://people.sabanciuniv.edu/~keskinoz/resume.htm
Extractions: Resume of Mehmet Keskinöz Current Position Assistant Professor of Telecommunications Engineering Program at Sabanci University, Istanbul, Turkey working on PHY algorithm development for wireless communications, digital signal processing and coding for communications, multimedia signal processing and biometric identification using correlation filters. Education Carnegie Mellon University , Pittsburgh, PA, USA August 2001 Ph.D., Electrical Engineering Thesis: Modeling, Equalization and Detection for Two-Dimensional Quadratic Storage Channels Application: Baseband communication channels, 2-D adaptive filters, coding. Carnegie Mellon University , Pittsburgh PA, USA 1996-1997 M.S., Electrical Engineering Thesis: Development and Use of a Labwindows Based User Interface to Apply Signal Processing Methods to the Magnetic Tape Storage Channels Application: hardware-software integration, baseband communication channels, adaptive filters Bogazici University , Istanbul Turkey 1990-1994 B.S., Electrical Engineering
Prototype Holographic Storage Device Unveiled - ZDNet UK News News hardware storage. Saturday 13th August 2005 holographic storage devices could be on sale within two years, according to US firm and Bell Labs http://news.zdnet.co.uk/hardware/storage/0,39020366,39183215,00.htm
Extractions: Holographic storage devices could be on sale within two years, according to US firm and Bell Labs spin-off InPhase Technologies which demonstrated a prototype holographic drive this week. InPhase says this prototype will be the foundation of its forthcoming Tapestry range of holographic drives, which it plans to launch commercially before the end of next year, according to reports, with data capacities ranging from 200GB to 1.6TB on a single disk. Tapestry has been under development for several years, and this isn't the first time that InPhase has claimed that it is close to commercial deployment. Back in 2002, it showed off a prototype holographic video recorder based on Tapestry which it said would ship in volume in 2004.
Storage Pipeline InPhase Raises $32.1 Million For Holographic LONDON InPhase Technologies, a developer of holographic data storage media and Find storage Networking hardware Delve Into SAN Management Software http://informationweek.storagepipeline.com/news/163701613
Extractions: InPhase (Longmont Colo.) was founded in December 2000 as a Lucent Technologies venture, spun out of Bell Labs research, with the objective of becoming the first company to bring holographic data storage technology to market. In the latest funding round German materials company Bayer MaterialScience AG has become a strategic investor as well as development partner for InPhase, the company said. Nanotech Partners Ltd., another new investor, is a venture capital firm sponsored by Mitsubishi Corp. Other investors in the round included New Venture Partners LLC, Hitachi Maxell Ltd., Alps Information Technology Fund LP, Yasuda Enterprise Development Co., and Japan Asia Investment Co. The $32.1 million has been earmarked to complete the commercialization of holographic data storage drive and media. The initial product, under the name Tapestry, would hold 300-Gbytes of data with a transfer rate of 20-Mbytes per second, InPhase said. Tapestry is aimed at archive needs in commercial markets such as professional video, regulatory compliance, medical imaging, satellite imaging, and scientific applications. "The recent public demonstration by InPhase of the world's first commercial holographic drive prototype validated our technical leadership in the holographic data storage market. Now, with the commitment and support of our investors, we have funds to move from technology leadership to commercial leadership," said Nelson Diaz, president and CEO of InPhase Technologies, in a statement.
3.4.1 The Hardware This market requires storage for data which is written and rarely read (whereas we write once and optical tape, recordable CDs, and holographic storage. http://atlas.web.cern.ch/Atlas/GROUPS/SOFTWARE/TDR/html/TDR-13.html
Extractions: [Next] [Previous] [Up] [Top] ... [Contents] 3.4 Technology trends Table 3-2 presents the current and the 2005 projected characteristics for memory and processors, taken from Estimated evolution of performance and cost for memories, processors, and disks. Memory 0.35 mm feature size 64 Mbits/chip 30 CHF/Mbyte 0.13 mm feature size 4000 Mbits/chip 0.50 CHF/Mbyte High-end processors 25 kCHF/system 5 kCHF/system Low-end processors 6 kCHF/system 1 kCHF/system Magnetic disk 400 CHF/Gbyte 6 Mbyte/s-disk 12 CHF/Gbyte multi-Gbyte/s per system Memory is expected to quadruple in capacity every three years due to decreasing feature size and increasing chip size. The fabrication facilities are currently financed and/or built for a feature size of 0.18 m m, and thus, new technology will be needed to reach the 2005 numbers. Memory capacity is not a major issue for LHC event processing farms - default system memory will be sufficient for event-by-event processing. However, the dropping cost will certainly influence the interactive analysis facilities where 10-100 Gbyte memory will be affordable. Here one can begin to imagine systems where frequently accessed data are maintained in memory, allowing to effectively utilize memory access speeds which are over 1000 times faster that disk access. From Table 3-2 one sees an estimated increase of 10 in unit computing power and a factor of 50 in computing power per unit cost. Note that this estimate includes a speculative increase of a factor of three from the number of instructions executed during each chip cycle. It is not clear today whether this type of parallelism will be pursued by the manufacturers. From these estimates, the very large aggregate processing capacity required for ATLAS appears to be affordable, but this will require an enormous number of processors. Thus, how these processors are interfaced, or the system architecture, becomes an important issue. One potential architecture is Scalable Parallel Processors where physically independent computers are interconnected by a high performance switch with a special interface which enables it to be used with a low hardware and software overhead (as opposed to a standard network connection). See
TREND Atomic holographic NanoTechnology Sets Pace for the Future AFM/ATF and Hard Drives for ALL IN ONE complete system hardware storage requirements. http://www.trendalaska.org/print.php?sid=81
Hardware | Technology, Project Management & Marketing News Optware, a developer of holographic data storage systems, plans to release it s While the hardware for reading/writing will be around EUR 7500 at http://weblog.cemper.com/a/c/hardware.php
Extractions: Holographic 30GB Card at the end of 2006 A fake-device picture here shows the nice credit-card sized 30GB media as well. They say they can make it even smaller down to a memory card size. While the hardware for reading/writing will be around EUR 7500 at release and the reading device alone be at EUR 1500, the media are said to be around 100 Yen ( 0,75 EUR, 1 USD The standardization of the holographic media technology is expected in December 2006 by ECMA, the guys who standarized the Javascript stuff and zillions of more technology standards. Of course if some Sony's or Microsofts would design their XBOX -4 or Playstation 4 hardware to use such a media for games, I am sure the price would rock down to a home user's purchasing spot of around 200-800 EUR within a few months. posted at 16:17 by CCC in Hardware (G) Com(0) TB(0) After having my 3 months young Samung SATA disk crash, and spending (WASTING!) considerable time recovering from old backups, old disks etc.etc. I came to the conclusion that my workstation needs a pro-like storage sub system.
Gizmodo - Peripherals been waiting for Optwares holographic storage system and it looks like we have The Optware, which stores data on holographic cards, will cost about http://www.gizmodo.com/gadgets/peripherals/index.php
Extractions: TCDA("cc=pel; dt"); Ads_kid=0;Ads_bid=0;Ads_xl=0;Ads_yl=0;Ads_xp='';Ads_yp='';Ads_opt=0;Ads_wrd='[KeyWord]';Ads_prf='';Ads_par=''; select tag Announcements Cellphones Deals Digital Cameras Gadgets Home Entertainment Laptops PCs PDAs Peripherals Portable Media Press Robots Smartphones Software Wireless Alien Five New Free Standing iPod Music Systems From iPort [MobileWhack] Portable Audio Recorders Review [Module Records] Now you can get RSI while you simultaneously try to combat it with the Wrist PC Keyboard from L3 Systems. Available in four colors (green, blue, black, and smokey-gray), this regular size QWERTY keyboard simply straps to your forearm and is ready for the road. Since it is designed with a completely sealed surface, it will even withstand rain or other treacherous weather systems. Best of all, you can finally proclaim your full geekness, or turn everyday into Halloween, by dressing up like the cyborg you wish you were. WristPC Keyboard [Product Page] New PSP Faceplates For Sale [Gadget Madness] Ads_kid=0;Ads_bid=0;Ads_xl=300;Ads_yl=250;Ads_xp='';Ads_yp='';Ads_opt=0;Ads_wrd='[KeyWord]';Ads_prf='';Ads_par='';
InPhase Nears Storage Breakthrough The idea of holographic storage has been pursued for more than four decades, but InPhase says the technology is nearing commercial reality. http://www.enterprisestorageforum.com/technology/news/article.php/3523316
NetworkStorageForum The idea of holographic storage has been pursued for more than four decades, but InPhase says the technology is nearing commercial reality. http://www.enterprisestorageforum.com/
Extractions: Best Practices for CRM Learn how to improve your ROI and customer service. WHITEPAPER: Integration in Medium- Sized Companies: A Necessary Ingredient for Customer Care Enhance operational efficiency and improve customer relationships. DEMO: 10-Minute Demo of NetSuite's Award- Winning Product View this role-based demo and find out how NetSuite can support a variety of roles in your organization.
Geek.com Geek News - Holographic Storage Isn't Dead Yet Few concepts seem more futuristic than holographic storage. Yet in reality, no one has succeeded in making holographic storage a success. http://www.geek.com/news/geeknews/2002Dec/bch20021209017652.htm
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Holographic Storage Close To Commercial Reality - Softpedia holographic storage close to commercial reality. Prototypes of holographic storing media appeared at the beginning if this year, when Inphase http://news.softpedia.com/news/Holographic-storage-close-to-commercial-reality-1
Extractions: Prototypes of holographic storing media appeared at the beginning if this year, when Inphase Technologies launched the first example of an optical device of this type. The model represents the foundation of a series called Tapestry, whose products will allow the writing of 200 GB to 1.6 TB (terra-bytes) on one disc. The specifications of these storing systems will allow 200 GB of data to be saved, and the next generation of discs, which will be ready by 2007, allows the storing of 400GB of data. InPhase systems have different dimensions than the ones produced by Optware, which use 120 mm discs and will be launched next year.
Oe Magazine - Tutorial The fundamental problems in achieving holographic storage have been the lack of a To write the data in a holographic storage system, a beamsplitter http://oemagazine.com/fromTheMagazine/dec03/tutorial.html
Extractions: and Lisa Dhar, InPhase Technologies Storing data holographically is an attractive proposition. Using the whole volume of a storage medium, instead of just the surface, allows us to encode much more information in a small space. In addition, the fact that data can be recorded and read out in parallel makes information access and transfer extremely fast. The fundamental problems in achieving holographic storage have been the lack of a viable storage medium and the need for a recording system that can take full advantage of holography's possibilities. Current developments are addressing both issues. Conventional optical storage systems achieve increases in density by decreasing the size of the marks on the surface of the storage disk. The primary advantage of holographic storage comes from using the volume of the medium and not just the surface to store information.
Extractions: White Papers, Product Literature, Webcasts and Case Studies FREE MEMBERSHIP - Create your personalized Bitpipe Service! Members: Sign in Sep 22, 2005 Free Newsletters Most Popular Reports Top Topics Research Guides Site Map About Us Search Bitpipe: Search Help Advanced Search My Searches Hardware ... Storage Hardware Browse the reports below to find the latest Storage Devices white papers, product literature, webcasts, and case studies.
Disk Storage - A CompInfo Directory Find the best sources of Internetbased information on Disk storage. hardware, Benchmarks, Reviews, News, Research, Glossary, Links and Surveys http://www.compinfo-center.com/stor/disk_storage.htm
Extractions: Disk Storage - Outline Topic Outline KnowledgeBases Newsgroups and FAQs Magazines and Ezines ... Key Training Providers Disk Storage - Knowledge Bases comp.arch.storage Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) Data Storage - storage device technology and manufacture (pennNET) Data Storage Company Links (DISK/TREND, Inc)
Macworld: News: Optware Seeks US Vendors To Adopt Holographic Storage s Almaden Research Center are also developing holographic storage devices. Optware has set up a consortium called the HVD Alliance to promote its technology http://www.macworld.com/news/2005/02/04/holographic/index.php
Extractions: February 04, 2005 2:15 pm ET Macworld Print Related Topics: Storage By Paul Kallender, IDG News Service Japan's Optware Corp. announced a detailed roadmap toward commercialization of its Holographic Versatile Disc (HVD) technology on Thursday. It has also set up an alliance to promote HVD and will later this year set up an office in the U.S. to promote the technology with major systems integrators there, it said. As with CDs and DVDs, HVD technology involves the use of a laser to store information on 12-centimeter discs. However, instead of recording data in dots on the disc, beams of light interfere with each other, forming patterns within the HVD disc. InPhase Technologies Inc.
Extractions: Main Japanese based Optware Corp. recently announced plans to create products based on its HVD (Holographic Versatile Disc). It will store between 100GB and 1TB of data and be able to transmit data as fast as 1G bit per second, using Collinear technology. Whilst American based InPhase Technologies Inc. recently began shipping its Tapestry HDS5000 media, a recordable holographic drive based on WORM (Write Once Read Many) technology. Along with a HVD Alliance launch set for early spring, you should expect to hear a lot more about these technologies in the coming months.
Howstuffworks "How Holographic Memory Will Work" In this article, you will learn how a holographic storage system might be built in the next three or four years, and what it will take to make a desktop http://computer.howstuffworks.com/holographic-memory.htm
Extractions: Devices that use light to store and read data have been the backbone of data storage for nearly two decades. Compact discs revolutionized data storage in the early 1980s, allowing multi-megabytes of data to be stored on a disc that has a diameter of a mere 12 centimeters and a thickness of about 1.2 millimeters. In 1997, an improved version of the CD, called a digital versatile disc (DVD), was released, which enabled the storage of full-length movies on a single disc.