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Tech 200 Terabyte / 100 layer optical discs are on their way (movies/physical media)

Adamant

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A major development in the production of optical discs has happened this week. Scientists at the University of Shanghai have unveiled a new form of optical disc that can hold up to 200,000 gigabytes of data.

For reference, the current 4K Blu-ray discs in circulation carry up to 100 gigabytes, meaning these new discs have a capacity that is 2000 times larger; which is a frankly staggering upgrade. While 4K Blu-rays feature a three-layer construction that stores data on each layer, these new discs have up to 100 layers, which accounts for the huge upgrade in storage.


In a recent report in Nature (via FlatpanelsHD), the scientists reported that the development of the "3D nanoscale" discs has been made possible thanks to 'dye-doped photoresist with aggregation-induced emission luminogens' – or AIE-DDPR for short. Those big technical words are mystifying to us – however, the bottom line is that these discs are made of a novel light-sensitive material that requires two types of lasers to read.

Interestingly, this paper suggests that manufacturing these discs won't require a whole lot of work, and that conventional DVD mass production that is already in place will be able to be used. In fact, it should only take six minutes to manufacture a blank disc, according to this study.

A disc with this capability should surely invigorate the 8K industry into making physical discs for the format, right? After all, this is our biggest gripe with the existence of 8K TVs. Unfortunately, this likely won't happen due to the lacklustre sales of 8K TVs and disinterest from Blu-ray manufacturers. Back in 2019, executive director of the 8K Association, Chris Chinnock, cast doubt on the possibility of 8K Blu-rays ever happening. He said there was "a low probability" that physical 8K discs would be developed, and that was four years ago; not much has changed since then.

Not to further rain on the parade of this new Blu-ray development, but we do have a slight issue on our hands when it comes to playing these discs. Currently speaking, there isn't really a player that's designed to handle these discs, and considering the dire state of the 4K player market, we don't expect to see one any time soon. While there are enthusiast options from Panasonic, Magnetar and Reavon out there, these are all notably expensive models ranging from £700 to over £2500; we dread to think what a player capable of reading these new discs would cost.

Still, we're certainly excited to see a new disc format emerge and are looking forward to seeing its potential in the home cinema space. As for now, it looks like this disc will be used for enterprise-use with data storage in mind – but personally, we're looking forward to the possibility of entire 4K movie box sets coming on just one disc. We can only hope.
 
Physical media?

But why
So you don’t fill your terabyte hard drive with shit that you only occasionally need.

Plus, I like to actually own some stuff. Any streaming media you have “purchased” you don’t actually own. If something happens and Amazon loses the rights to something m, or they completely fail, your entire movie collection is gone.
 
That's uncompressed 8K 16 bit RGB color file size with room to spare. It would look insane. You could even fit super long films uncompressed on one disk. Also uncompressed audio equal to or greater than Akira's 192 KHz 24 bit Japanese audio track running at the same time (the audio on that blu-ray disk took up something like 12 or 16 Gigs itself).
 
That's uncompressed 8K 16 bit RGB color file size with room to spare. It would look insane. You could even fit super long films uncompressed on one disk. Also uncompressed audio equal to or greater than Akira's 192 KHz 24 bit Japanese audio track running at the same time (the audio on that blu-ray disk took up something like 12 or 16 Gigs itself).
I imagine you could fit the entirety of Harry Potter, Lord of the Rings, and The Hobbit, including all special features onto one disc and still have room left over. I would legit be interested to know what the absolute limit would be? Maybe every James Bond movie on one disc? Or every Godzilla film ever made on one disc?
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So that once you own it, it can’t be edited by future generations of retards who like to judge prior works of art by whatever standards are deemed acceptable at the time.
Because it wasn’t a big deal when they edited them for tv. But it’s a huge deal when they edit them on streaming services for some reason.
 
Sadly the write speed on those optical disks is about 5mb per second--or in other words it would take about 500 days to write to the disc.
 
So you don’t fill your terabyte hard drive with shit that you only occasionally need.

Plus, I like to actually own some stuff. Any streaming media you have “purchased” you don’t actually own. If something happens and Amazon loses the rights to something m, or they completely fail, your entire movie collection is gone.
Then digital download instead.
 
I imagine you could fit the entirety of Harry Potter, Lord of the Rings, and The Hobbit, including all special features onto one disc and still have room left over. I would legit be interested to know what the absolute limit would be? Maybe every James Bond movie on one disc? Or every Godzilla film ever made on one disc?
fab-fahthagawd.gif
Maybe every season of SNL on one disc as well.
 
I'm not sure I see another disk format being launched personally, UHD already is fairly small in the uptake.
 
Probably not really for consumer use, but a real boon for film/VFX studios that eat up TBs like nothing. 10 of these and you're golden.
 
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