Feuer Frei!
08-27-11, 11:34 PM
A data repository almost 10 times bigger than any made before is being built by researchers at IBM's Almaden, California, research lab. The 120 petabyte "drive"—that's 120 million gigabytes—is made up of 200,000 conventional hard disk drives working together. The giant data container is expected to store around one trillion files and should provide the space needed to allow more powerful simulations of complex systems, like those used to model weather and climate.
A 120 petabyte drive could hold 24 billion typical five-megabyte MP3 files or comfortably swallow 60 copies of the biggest backup of the Web, the 150 billion pages that make up the Internet Archive's WayBack Machine (http://wayback.archive.org/web/).
The data storage group at IBM Almaden (http://www.almaden.ibm.com/) is developing the record-breaking storage system for an unnamed client that needs a new supercomputer for detailed simulations of real-world phenomena. However, the new technologies developed to build such a large repository could enable similar systems for more conventional commercial computing, says Bruce Hillsberg (http://www.almaden.ibm.com/storagesystems/), director of storage research at IBM and leader of the project.
SOURCE (http://www.technologyreview.com/computing/38440/)
A 120 petabyte drive could hold 24 billion typical five-megabyte MP3 files or comfortably swallow 60 copies of the biggest backup of the Web, the 150 billion pages that make up the Internet Archive's WayBack Machine (http://wayback.archive.org/web/).
The data storage group at IBM Almaden (http://www.almaden.ibm.com/) is developing the record-breaking storage system for an unnamed client that needs a new supercomputer for detailed simulations of real-world phenomena. However, the new technologies developed to build such a large repository could enable similar systems for more conventional commercial computing, says Bruce Hillsberg (http://www.almaden.ibm.com/storagesystems/), director of storage research at IBM and leader of the project.
SOURCE (http://www.technologyreview.com/computing/38440/)