The breakthrough comes from Microsoft researchers and could enable the preservation of terabytes of data for a very long time ...
Borosilicate glass, the same material used in lab equipment and kitchen cookware, can encode data using femtosecond lasers at densities and lifespans no existing archival medium can match, according ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
End of data decay? Microsoft’s ‘glass plates’ can store data for 10,000 years
Researchers at Microsoft have developed a method to store massive amounts of digital information ...
Thousands of years from now, what will remain of our digital era? The ever-growing vastness of human knowledge is no longer ...
Researchers use mini plasma explosions to encode the equivalent of two million books into a coaster-sized device. The method ...
For roughly a decade, Microsoft has been perfecting a high-density storage technology that uses glass, lasers, and cameras, ...
Microsoft has been developing Project Silica for years, transforming glass into permanent storage media capable of retaining digital data for up to 10,000 years. The company ...
A Microsoft Research study suggests glass blocks etched with lasers could provide enduring data archives ...
New Scientist on MSN
Data centres could store information in glass for thousands of years
Microsoft researchers have developed a technology that writes data into glass with lasers, raising the prospect of robotic libraries full of glass tablets packed with data ...
Microsoft’s Project Silica can store 5TB of data on glass for 10,000 years, offering a durable, energy-free solution to prevent data rot.
The technology can store massive amounts of data without degradation for 10,000 years.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results