Pattern-based storage system

 

Special Correspondent

 

The Rainbow Versatile Disk stores data in the form of geometric images

 

Data is stored in a dense formation on a plastic sheet

It may rival the hard disk or flash memory options

 

Bangalore: A final-year MCA student from a Kerala engineering college may
have developed a technology where colours and trigonometric shapes can be
used

to encode and store data in dense clusters. Sainul Abideen of the MES
College of Engineering, Kuttipuram, Malapuram district, has demonstrated the
viability

of converting data into geometric images in patterns and then storing it in
a dense formation on a plastic sheet, or even on paper.

 

He calls this a Rainbow Versatile Disk or RVD (like the Digital Versatile
Desk or DVD) and claims that a single sheet can store between 90 and 100 GB
of

information.

 

A small Rainbow card, the size of a phone SIM card, can store about 2 GB of
data, he claims.

 

"I have achieved storage densities of about 2.7 gigabytes per square inch,"
Mr. Abideen told The Hindu over phone from Kottakkal in Kerala.

 

It is also cheaper to make an RVD, compared to a CD or DVD, says the
entrepreneur. Mr. Abideenis talking to some companies interested in turning
his idea

into a saleable product. He can be contacted at [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 

Shadab Husain Mo: 9335206224

 

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