快猫短视频

New kid on the block

IT鈥橲 the next big thing鈥攁llegedly. A super-dense fluorescent disc
designed to 鈥渞eplace DVDs, CDs and VHS videotape鈥 will be played in public for
the first time next week at the swish Claridges hotel in London鈥攊f it
works that is. Last month, at a private demo, a prototype played only audio and
the sound stuttered and was distorted.

However, Constellation 3D of Concord, Massachusetts, is confident that its
new Fluorescent Multilayer Video Disc (FMVD) system will knock spots off
DVD.

The new discs look just like transparent CDs. They are made by first pressing
10 plastic films, each 15 micrometres thick. The films are then laminated onto a
tough substrate to provide a multilayered 鈥渄ata sandwich鈥 with a capacity of
over 40 gigabytes. The company reckons future 100-layer versions of FMVD will be
able to hold 1000 gigabytes鈥攁 terabyte. DVDs hold just 4.7 gigabytes.

Although the new discs won鈥檛 work on existing CD and DVD players, FMVD
players could be made to play today鈥檚 discs. Constellation says FMVDs will be
ideal for memory-hungry high-definition TV recordings and will easily fit a
standard movie onto a single disc (several DVDs are needed for HDTV).
Constellation is also planning a 20-layer credit card.

The company is not the first to try multiple layers to boost storage. Ten
years ago, IBM tried to make CDs with many thin layers鈥攅ach layer had pits
like a CD. But it gave up because the adjacent layers soaked up too much of the
laser light as it passed through.

Constellation鈥檚 answer is to fill the pits with fluorescent dye, which emits
light when struck by a laser beam tightly focussed into a powerful spot. Pits in
the adjacent layers above and below do not fluoresce because they are struck by
unfocused and therefore much weaker light. The light emitted by the fluorescent
dye is of a slightly different wavelength to the laser, so a sensor can pick it
up. To read the different layers, one after the other, the laser in the player
simply switches its focus.

The company is developing recordable blank discs, with dyed pits that change
colour during recording. Despite the complex lamination, Constellation says
FMVDs won鈥檛 cost any more than DVDs.

Next week鈥檚 press demonstration should be interesting. Last month鈥檚 prototype
played only audio and had difficulty switching between its six layers: the sound
distorted until the focus control was adjusted manually. But Constellation
promises that next week鈥檚 demonstration will show colour video with sound from a
fluorescent disc. Company executive John Ellis admits that spectators will only
be seeing analogue video鈥擟onstellation won鈥檛 have a digital prototype
until August.

Computer firm Dell is guardedly encouraging of the idea. Tom Pratt, Dell鈥檚
storage technology expert, has studied all the practical methods of increasing
storage densities. 鈥淔MVD technology could provide an eight-fold increase in
current optical disc storage capacity,鈥 he wrote in a recent technical paper.

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