Sujet : Re: Proof of principle demonstration of 3-D magnetic recording
De : alien (at) *nospam* comet.invalid (Jan Panteltje)
Groupes : sci.electronics.designDate : 09. Apr 2024, 14:11:40
Autres entêtes
Message-ID : <uv3b9s$bvge$1@solani.org>
References : 1 2 3 4
User-Agent : NewsFleX-1.5.7.5 (Linux-5.15.32-v7l+)
On a sunny day (Tue, 9 Apr 2024 12:00:40 +0200) it happened Arie de Muijnck
<
noreply@ademu.com> wrote in <
nnd$6ebcbc3d$25de2d67@8f3b57b8b1b11fb4>:
On 2024-04-09 09:49, Jan Panteltje wrote:
On a sunny day (Tue, 9 Apr 2024 09:19:46 +0200) it happened Arie de Muijnck
<noreply@ademu.com> wrote in <nnd$16a4abad$09e25412@0ec9ca3c539ad932>:
On 2024-04-09 06:42, Jan Panteltje wrote:
Proof-of-principle demonstration of 3-D magnetic recording
Possibility of ultra-high density hard disk drives with areal densities exceeding 10 Tbit/in² using multi-level magnetic
recording
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/04/240408130543.htm
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Picture of layers:
https://www.nims.go.jp/eng/news/press/2024/03/202403270.html
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Great idea for recording.
Now we just have to invent a reading system...
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Arie
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correlation of 2 magnetic sensors pointing down in an angle?
MS1 MS MS2
\ \/ /
=========== top layer
\ /
\/
=========== second layer
Use fixed font.
Have not tried it...
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Pointing magnetic sensors? Thin beams? Unknown to me.
Array of (non-thin beam!) sensors + tomography? Might work.
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Glad I'm retired, this looks too much like the DocData optical tape storage I worked on.
Had to look that up, in Dutch:
https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/DOCdata strange, never heard of that
At some point Philips asked me to write the service documentation for their Videodisc.
I have written English service documentation from lab reports for Philips Mil in Huizen, and worked in their service-center, so they knew me.
As I had a lot of experience with Ampex magnetic video tape I suggested a dropout compensation system to them back then.
Went in to some detail in Eindhoven.. but that analog optical video disc never really came of the ground.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VideodiscThe whole world changed when MPEG compression became available,
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MPEG-1now you could store movies digitally in much less space, like on an audio CD.
and digital error detection and correction became possible.
I still have the old Laser Vision 92VP830 and 22VP932 repair method and service manual and schematics upstairs in a drawer.
https://www.siwe.be/files/collectie/V366-Philips-Laserdisc-VLP830-200pi.pdf