
Proceedings Paper
Progress toward the commercial realization of high performance holographic data storage: architecture and function of the InPhase Technologies holographic driveFormat | Member Price | Non-Member Price |
---|---|---|
$17.00 | $21.00 |
Paper Abstract
The promise of using volume holography to deliver high performance optical storage systems is at hand. The
possibility of extremely large storage capacities and fast transfer rates make holographic storage ideal for high
performance video applications. An overview of advances at InPhase Technologies toward the first drive product is
presented. InPhase Technologies is developing a holographic recordable optical drive and associated disk media for
professional archive applications. The target user capacity for the first product is 300GB of user data with sustained
write and read user transfer rates of 20MByte/s. The architecture, design and implementation of the holographic
drive are described here.
Paper Details
Date Published: 13 September 2006
PDF: 6 pages
Proc. SPIE 6335, Organic Holographic Materials and Applications IV, 63350G (13 September 2006); doi: 10.1117/12.683810
Published in SPIE Proceedings Vol. 6335:
Organic Holographic Materials and Applications IV
Susanna Orlic; Klaus Meerholz, Editor(s)
PDF: 6 pages
Proc. SPIE 6335, Organic Holographic Materials and Applications IV, 63350G (13 September 2006); doi: 10.1117/12.683810
Show Author Affiliations
William L. Wilson, InPhase Technologies, Inc. (United States)
L. Dhar, InPhase Technologies, Inc. (United States)
L. Dhar, InPhase Technologies, Inc. (United States)
K. R. Curtis, InPhase Technologies, Inc. (United States)
Published in SPIE Proceedings Vol. 6335:
Organic Holographic Materials and Applications IV
Susanna Orlic; Klaus Meerholz, Editor(s)
© SPIE. Terms of Use
