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posted by FatPhil on Thursday August 03 2017, @03:50AM   Printer-friendly
from the when-denser-is-cleverer dept.

IBM has claimed its fifth-in-succession world tape density record with a 330TB raw capacity technology using Sony tape media tech.

Back in April, 2015 IBM and Fujitsu demonstrated a 123 billion bits/in2 220TB tape using so-called Nanocubic technology and barium ferrite tape media.

This time around, IBM's tape drive researchers are working with Sony Storage Media Solutions and its sputtered media. Engineering developments have enabled an areal density of 201Gb/in2.

Their technology includes:

  • New signal-processing algorithms for the data channel, based on noise-predictive detection principles, enabling reliable operation at a linear density of 818,000 bits per inch with an ultra-narrow 48nm-wide tunnelling magneto-resistive (TMR) reader.
  • A set of combined advanced servo control technologies that enable head positioning with an accuracy of better than 7 nanometres.
  • Use of a 48nm-wide TMR hard disk drive read head, which enables a track density of 246,200 tracks per inch, a 13-fold increase over the TS1155 tape drive.
  • New low-friction tape head technology that permits use of very smooth tape media.

IBM and Sony have developed magnetic tape that can store 201 gigabits per square inch, enabling the creation of a 330 TB (uncompressed) tape cartridge:

To achieve such a dramatic increase in areal density, Sony and IBM tackled different parts of the problem: Sony developed a new type of tape that has a higher density of magnetic recording sites, and IBM Research worked on new heads and signal processing tech to actually read and extract data from those nanometre-long patches of magnetism.

Sony's new tape is underpinned by two novel technologies: an improved built-in lubricant layer, which keeps it running smoothly through the machine, and a new type of magnetic layer. Usually, a tape's magnetic layer is applied in liquid form, kind of like paint—which is one of the reasons that magnetic tape is so cheap and easy to produce in huge quantities. In this case, Sony has instead used sputter deposition, a mature technique that has been used by the semiconductor and hard drive industries for decades to lay down thin films.

LTO-7 stores 6 TB uncompressed. The last Linear Tape-Open release on the roadmap, LTO-10, is planned to store 48 TB. This technology would be used for LTO-12 or LTO-13.

Also at The Verge, ZDNet, The Register, and YouTube (2m12s, IBM Research).

201 Gb/in² Recording Areal Density on Sputtered Magnetic Tape (DOI: 10.1109/TMAG.2017.2727822) (DX)

Previously: IBM and FUJIFILM Create Equivalent of 220 TB Tape Cartridge


Original Submission #1Original Submission #2Original Submission #3

 
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  • (Score: 2, Disagree) by Arik on Thursday August 03 2017, @05:20AM (4 children)

    by Arik (4543) on Thursday August 03 2017, @05:20AM (#548235) Journal
    Thanks, informative!

    One quibble though. I know manufacturers always love to push those 'compressed' numbers but calling them speculative would be insulting to speculators. Of course the files to be backed up are nearly always completely uncompressable, particularly the ones large enough to matter.
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  • (Score: 2, Insightful) by fakefuck39 on Thursday August 03 2017, @09:47AM (3 children)

    by fakefuck39 (6620) on Thursday August 03 2017, @09:47AM (#548281)

    Waaaat. Where is it that you're getting all that uncompressable data? Have you ever had a job, at any company? You know - "company" - as in "corporation" - as in the people who store most of that data in the world?

    Data is stored on disks. Disks have data at rest encryption. Most things now are compressed on disk as well, especially if it's stored on flash. A block-based device gets compression of about 2:1 for active data. Tape gets higher because it doesn't have to worry about fast decompression and random access. CAS-type and other dedup+compress devices get about 6:1 compression. For active data. See things like EMC VMAX and XIO. These are not marketing numbers - those are about a third more.

    People store movies and photos. That's not where the world's data is, and that's not what LTO tapes are for. Dear moron, before teaching us things and using phrases like "Of course":
    1) get a real job at a real company
    2) say something you actually know something about.

    • (Score: 2) by sgleysti on Thursday August 03 2017, @05:20PM (2 children)

      by sgleysti (56) Subscriber Badge on Thursday August 03 2017, @05:20PM (#548423)

      Maybe his job involves running very rigorous qualification tests on state of the art, high speed, hardware random number generators, and he needs to keep the datasets for quality assurance and auditing purposes.

      Or, far more likely, he would be storing audio and video files that are already highly compressed. This is the most likely consumer scenario, although backing up widely available data (movies, music) strikes me as strange. Perhaps they are family videos.

      • (Score: 2) by kaszz on Friday August 04 2017, @01:33AM (1 child)

        by kaszz (4211) on Friday August 04 2017, @01:33AM (#548542) Journal

        Backup of studio raw 4k video?
        Some people actually do video for a living..

        • (Score: 2) by sgleysti on Friday August 04 2017, @04:17AM

          by sgleysti (56) Subscriber Badge on Friday August 04 2017, @04:17AM (#548613)

          Ah, good call.