OT: Star Trek - Isolinear Storage

From: Larry Anderson <foxnhare_at_goldrush.com>
Date: Sun Apr 12 14:18:58 1998

> From: "Hotze" <photze_at_batelco.com.bh>
> Subject: Is this possible? (Storage) (Off-topic?)
>
> Sorry, but this has been bugging me for quite some time. In Star Trek, they
> use "Isolinear" based memory circuts to store information in both the short
> and long term. So, from the looks of it, it's some kind of crystal, and can
> transmit it's data very quickly, and with no moving parts, so I'm guessing
> that it's similiar to today's RAM. Now, for the hard part: It can hold
> entire encyclopedia's in tiny amounts. In one episiode, they had nanites,
> little robot-bugs that could hold "gigabytes of information," and were
> microscopic. Furthermore, in some episodes, they find Chodak and T'Kon
> ruins, between 900,000 to 700,000 years old, with half or more of the data
> intact.
> Was crystaline storage ever attempted like this? Is it possible?
> Feasable?

A few years back I read a facinating article on holographic storage systems.
Where the medium was a 'slide sized' wafer and was recorded and read
holographically using a laser beam. Being holographic in nature the denisty
was way more then magnetic disc or CD. That was the closest that I've read to
Star Trek like storage.
-- 
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Larry Anderson - Sysop of Silicon Realms BBS (300-2400bd) (209) 754-1363
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Received on Sun Apr 12 1998 - 14:18:58 BST

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