The company will introduce its revolutionary CeraMemory technology, which uses inorganic nanolayers only 50-100 atoms thick to store data. Cerabyte plans to have CeraMemory cartridges with capacities ranging from 10 to 100 PB (petabytes) by 2030, and CeraTape tape in capacities up to 1 EB (exabytes) by 2035.

These innovations address challenges related to data center density, performance, access, cost and sustainability. To record data in CeraMemory, lasers or particle beams are used, which structures data matrices similar to QR codes. Data can be read using high-resolution microscopic imaging or electron beam microscopy techniques. The company claims that its technology delivers impressive read/write speeds in the gigabyte-per-second range while saving energy.

Cerabyte claims its media can withstand extreme temperatures and harsh environments to last more than 5,000 years.

Source: Ferra

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