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DVD Video - India to make 850 Gbytes nano tech dvds

 
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Old 05-29-2005, 11:58 AM   #1
Default India to make 850 Gbytes nano tech dvds


This is truly amazing. One dvd to store 300 Bollywood or 600
Hollywood movies , which are only half the length of Bollywood but
cant compare in entertainment value with their songs and dances ,
great costumes and sets and superb heart touching dialog . On sale at
amazon.com and others . 'Border', 'Khalanyak' and others with
subtitles are a good start .
Just one dvd to store a year's worth of movies or tv programs.
One problem is that the smaller the particle size , the more problems
you have with dirt or fingerprints . CDs play on , while dvds will
stop and the new ones may never play at all

excerpt
By Anand Parthasarathy
The Hindu
Sunday, May 29, 2005


A new contender raises the storage stakes -- a hundred
fold


DVDs being packed in the Greater Noida plant of Moser
Baer. The company is geared to turn out either Blu Ray or
HD-DVD disks in the future.


BANGALORE: `Size Does Matter' -- if you want to be pack
leader in the optical storage business. And the latest
contender for the title of `Digital Godzilla' has just
stomped into the arena, promising a jumbo-sized offering
that dwarfs all rivals in the field. United States-based
storage player Iomega, has announced, it has been granted
two optical storage patents, that if converted into a
production process, can turn out Digital Versatile Disks
(DVDs) with a mind-boggling 850 giga bytes (GB)capacity --
that is 850 billion bits of information. This will make
the devices about 100 times bigger than the biggest DVDs
available today -- and with at least 20 times more
capacity than the next-generation high-density formats
being readied for year-end availability.


Ironically, to achieve these huge storage capacities,
Iomega engineers have exploited nano technology -- the
science of very small particles, touching atom sizes. In
its patent document, released by the U.S. Patent Office,
Iomega calls its technology ``Nano-Grating'' -- encoding
data on the surface of the DVD, using nano-sized
particles.


Experts believe the transition from patent to product
could take anything from two to five years. Today's 4.5
GB DVDs (9 GB, double sided) are set to be replaced by
the high-density formats expected by end 2005.
Unfortunately the old VHS-versus-Beta videocassette
format wars of the 1980s seem to be replaying: Two rival
camps have emerged in the high-density DVD business. One
-- Blu-Ray -- is backed by Sony, Hitachi, TDK, Panasonic
and others. The other -- HD-DVD (for High Density DVD) --
is supported by Toshiba, Sanyo and NEC. The formats which
will increase today's storage capacity at least ten-fold,
are incompatible and will force customers to make a
choice between two types of disks and players.
....
excerpt observer.co.uk
Studies show that skipping this meal reduces performance at school and
work - though not any breakfast will do. Sugar snacks are unadvisable,
for example. Kids who start the day on these have the attention spans
of a 70-year-old.

Instead, you should plump for beans on toast. Toast on its own boosts
cognition, says New Scientist, but beans are even better. They are
rich in fibre and high-fibre diets are linked to improved cognition.
And if you can't face beans in the morning, or if fellow commuters
object, spread Marmite on your toast.

Then there is the simple issue of 'using it or losing it'. Failure to
keep your brain stimulated will cause cognitive decay. As the US
writer Erma Bombeck once claimed: 'Anybody who watches three games of
football in a row should be declared brain dead.'

Try learning a musical instrument, which could have a major impact on
your thinking. 'Six-year-old children who were given music lessons, as
opposed to drama lessons or no extra instruction, got a 2-to-3 point
boost in IQ scores compared with the others,' says the magazine.
Simply listening to stories, such as radio's A Book at Bedtime, also
provides a boost to performance, as do puzzles, such as crosswords.

At the same time, you also need to know when to turn off and relax.
Lack of sleep is a key factor in poor intellectual performance.
According to Sean Drummond, of the University of California, San
Diego, anyone who has been awake for 21 hours has the abilities
equivalent 'to someone who is legally drunk'. Sleep not only refreshes
the brain, it processes new memories and hones new skills. Just taking
a nap after lunch can have a real effect.

At the same time, such sedentary habits should be balanced with proper
exercise. Walking for half an hour three times a week can improve
learning, concentration, and abstract reasoning - particularly among
the elderly and schoolchildren. Among the latter, those who exercise
several times a week gain higher than average grades at age 10,
particularly boys. The reason, suggests Angela Balding of Exeter
University, may be that aerobic exercise boosts mental powers by
sending extra oxygen to the brain.

Not all the advice is straightforward, however. Learning a violin or
piano, and driving one's musical ability may boost IQ, but listening
to unfamiliar music while working interferes with concentration. You
should only have familiar background music while working.




habshi
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Old 05-29-2005, 01:00 PM   #2
Peteris Krumins
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: India to make 850 Gbytes nano tech dvds
habshi wrote:
> This is truly amazing. One dvd to store 300 Bollywood or 600
> Hollywood movies , which are only half the length of Bollywood but
> cant compare in entertainment value with their songs and dances ,
> great costumes and sets and superb heart touching dialog . On sale at
> amazon.com and others . 'Border', 'Khalanyak' and others with
> subtitles are a good start .



I don't see anything amazing there. Technology evolves and hey,
640 KB ought to be enough for everybody.


P.Krumins



Peteris Krumins
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Old 05-29-2005, 02:19 PM   #3
Nonymous
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: India to make 850 Gbytes nano tech dvds

Whatever you do, don't scratch it.




Nonymous
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Old 05-29-2005, 04:33 PM   #4
John Sefton
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: India to make 850 Gbytes nano tech dvds


Nonymous wrote:
> Whatever you do, don't scratch it.
>
>

In the original ads for cd
it showed a dog with one in its
mouth and emphasized how
indestructible they are compared to
records!?



John Sefton
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Old 05-29-2005, 04:43 PM   #5
lemonus
 
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Default Re: India to make 850 Gbytes nano tech dvds
640KB? you can't even store a 1/10 of an mp3 file!!!!



lemonus
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Old 05-29-2005, 04:52 PM   #6
T Wake
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: India to make 850 Gbytes nano tech dvds

"lemonus" <> wrote in message
news: ups.com...
> 640KB? you can't even store a 1/10 of an mp3 file!!!!
>


Its a quote about the time when 640Kb was considered the "most" RAM anyone
would ever need and explains why DOS has a 640Kb limit to the amount of RAM
it could address without virtual drivers. I suspect it wasn't an attempt to
imply 640 was enough today.




T Wake
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Old 05-29-2005, 11:00 PM   #7
Oldus Fartus
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: India to make 850 Gbytes nano tech dvds
T Wake wrote:
> "lemonus" <> wrote in message
> news: ups.com...
>
>>640KB? you can't even store a 1/10 of an mp3 file!!!!
>>

>
>
> Its a quote about the time when 640Kb was considered the "most" RAM anyone
> would ever need and explains why DOS has a 640Kb limit to the amount of RAM
> it could address without virtual drivers. I suspect it wasn't an attempt to
> imply 640 was enough today.
>
>


Quite close, but in the interests of accuracy the 640k limit was
actually imposed by the 8086 CPU, which could address 1 Meg. DOS used
640k, with the balance used by peripheral cards like video cards,
network cards, the ROM BIOS program and the XT hard disk controller.

When the 286 was introduced, the CPU could address 16 MB, and the
386/486 4 GB, but to maintain computability, the DOS limit was retained.
The newer chips had a *real mode* which behaved and looked like
the 8086, and a *protected mode* to take advantage of the features of
the new CPUs.

IBM/MS intended OS/2 to take over from DOS, and this would have freed
the users from the DOS limits quite early in the piece, but as history
shows, the falling out between the then partners, meant we were saddled
with the DOS limits for many more years than we should have been.

--
Cheers
Oldus Fartus


Oldus Fartus
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Old 05-29-2005, 11:38 PM   #8
Alpha
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: India to make 850 Gbytes nano tech dvds

"John Sefton" <> wrote in message
news:4299df5d$...
>
>
> Nonymous wrote:
>> Whatever you do, don't scratch it.

> In the original ads for cd
> it showed a dog with one in its
> mouth and emphasized how
> indestructible they are compared to
> records!?
>


This is one of the biggest fictions of optical media. Analog records are
far more robust than optical digital at failure rate. Particularly for DVD,
since they approach failure margins so closely.





Alpha
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Old 05-30-2005, 01:24 AM   #9
Uncle Al
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: India to make 850 Gbytes nano tech dvds
habshi wrote:
>
> This is truly amazing.


A wog with a clean ass crack?

> One dvd to store 300 Bollywood or 600
> Hollywood movies


Uncle Al's CD rack has more platters than that - and it revolves.

Idiot wog.

[snip idiot wog crap]

news:alt.binaries.pictures.erotica.indian-asian
The ugliest women on the planet, and worse with their clothes off.
Goes to show that a horny man will mount anything if stock animals are
not available.

--
Uncle Al
http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/
(Toxic URL! Unsafe for children and most mammals)
http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/qz.pdf


Uncle Al
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Old 05-30-2005, 09:00 AM   #10
No One
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: India to make 850 Gbytes nano tech dvds
Oldus Fartus wrote:

> T Wake wrote:
>
>> "lemonus" <> wrote in message
>> news: ups.com...
>>
>>> 640KB? you can't even store a 1/10 of an mp3 file!!!!
>>>

>>
>>
>> Its a quote about the time when 640Kb was considered the "most" RAM
>> anyone would ever need and explains why DOS has a 640Kb limit to the
>> amount of RAM it could address without virtual drivers. I suspect it
>> wasn't an attempt to imply 640 was enough today.
>>

>
> Quite close, but in the interests of accuracy the 640k limit was
> actually imposed by the 8086 CPU, which could address 1 Meg. DOS used
> 640k, with the balance used by peripheral cards like video cards,
> network cards, the ROM BIOS program and the XT hard disk controller.
>
> When the 286 was introduced, the CPU could address 16 MB, and the
> 386/486 4 GB, but to maintain computability, the DOS limit was retained.
> The newer chips had a *real mode* which behaved and looked like the
> 8086, and a *protected mode* to take advantage of the features of the
> new CPUs.
>
> IBM/MS intended OS/2 to take over from DOS, and this would have freed
> the users from the DOS limits quite early in the piece, but as history
> shows, the falling out between the then partners, meant we were saddled
> with the DOS limits for many more years than we should have been.
>


OS/2 was a good OS, but a bitch to install. There is still DOS and Win
3.1 crap still under the sheets in XP.


No One
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