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DNA cassette tapes could solve global data storage problems
Our increasingly digitized world has a data storage problem. Hard drives and other storage media are reaching their limits, ...
Ethan Miller, professor of computer science, directs the Center for Research in Storage Systems (CRSS). (Photo by Elena Zhukova) Rekha Pitchumani, a computer science graduate student in the Baskin ...
Computer scientists at the University of California, Santa Cruz, are developing a new approach to online “deep storage” of digital data that promises to have many advantages over traditional backup ...
Quantum computing will process massive amounts of information. Workloads could include diagnostic simulations and analysis at speeds far greater than existing computing. But, to be fully effective, ...
It’s no secret that every industry is looking for better ways to manage their data, with global data volumes expected to double from 2022 to 2026. And the answer for future storage innovations may be ...
In the early days of the nuclear energy industry, an energy official claimed that with the advent of nuclear energy, electricity would be too cheap to meter. It didn’t work out that way. I think about ...
The terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 focused the minds of chief executives and chief information officers on the nightmare scenario of being without their IT systems, however temporarily, and ...
Holding 100 metres of the DNA tape, the cassette is able to hold 36 petabytes of data – equivalent to 36,000 terabyte hard ...
Storage.AI focuses on data-handling efficiency after packets reach their destinations. Founding members include AMD, Cisco, Dell, IBM, Intel, NetApp, and Pure Storage. In the modern AI era, networks ...
The research finds that AI is already revolutionizing energy storage at multiple levels, starting with the performance of ...
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