100,000-Year Memory Candidate

September 24th, 02007 by Kevin Kelly

DVDs don’t. Tape doesn’t. Paper won’t. But rock does. In fact carved rock is about the only medium we have that might last 100,000 years. Most of our current electronic media will hardly last several decades. You need to continuously migrate info from one platform to the next as the current platform crumbles beneath you.

The first enthusiasms for a new electronic platform hint that perhaps “self-assembling nanowire of germanium antimony telluride” may have a working life of 100,000 years. According to this report in Physorg, this new nanoscale memory material is not only extremely small but also extremely durable. (The original work was published in the October 2007 issue of Nature Nanotechnology, which is not online yet.)

Tests showed extremely low power consumption for data encoding (0.7mW per bit). They also indicated the data writing, erasing and retrieval (50 nanoseconds) to be 1,000 times faster than conventional Flash memory and indicated the device would not lose data even after approximately 100,000 years of use, all with the potential to realize terabit-level nonvolatile memory device density.

“This new form of memory has the potential to revolutionize the way we share information, transfer data and even download entertainment as consumers,” Agarwal said. “This represents a potential sea-change in the way we access and store data.”

Selfassemblenano
(This picture is of a different self-assembling nano circuit by IBM.)

We’ve heard that last claim before. But even if this memory would remain intact for 1,000 years, it would be a revolution in digital preservation.

2 Responses to “100,000-Year Memory Candidate”

  1. Chuck Says:

    And I think of the Sci Fi story from my youth…was it Heinlien or Asimov, who wrote of the computer with all the knowledge of mankind stored inside for the next 10,000 or more years. All the other computers were downloaded into the survivor system, and once loaded, were destroyed, as they were no longer needed. Then, when the scientists asked it a question at the end of the process, the computer responed:
    password please:
    and no one knew the password.

  2. Jonathan Danforth Says:

    Now that there is potential for having a long-lasting medium we need to develop formats that will stand the test of time. I sincerely doubt that my great grandchildren will have the slightest idea what to do with a JPEG.

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