A
written piece of glass (with a copy of Microsoft Flight Simulator map data on
it). Credit: Microsoft Research
Thousands
of years from now, what will remain of our digital era? The ever-growing
vastness of human knowledge is no longer stored in libraries, but on hard
drives that struggle to last decades, let alone millennia.
However, information written into glass
by lasers could allow data to be preserved for more than 10,000 years,
Microsoft announced in a study on Wednesday.
Since 2019, Microsoft's Silica project
has been trying to encode data on glass plates, in a throwback to the early
days of photography, when negatives were also stored on glass.
The system uses silica glass, a common
material that is resistant to changes in temperature, moisture and
electromagnetic interference.
These are all problems for energy-hungry
data centers, which use fast-degrading hard drives and magnetic tapes that
require backing up every few years.
In the journal Nature,
Microsoft's research arm said Silica was the first glass storage technology
that had been demonstrated to
be reliable for writing, reading and decoding data.
However, experts not involved in the
project warned that this new tech still faces numerous challenges.
Reading
equipment. Credit: Microsoft Research
How to write inside glass
First, bits of data are turned into
symbols, which correspond to three-dimensional pixels called voxels.
A high-powered laser pulse then
writes these minuscule voxels into square glass plates that are roughly the
size of a CD.
"The symbols are written layer
by layer, from the bottom up, to fill the full thickness of the glass,"
the study explained.
To read the data requires a special
microscope that can see each layer, then decode the information using an
algorithm powered by artificial intelligence.
The Microsoft researchers estimated
that the glass could survive for more than 10,000 years at a blistering 290
degrees Celsius, which suggests the data could last even longer at room
temperature.
However, the researchers did not
look into what happened when the glass was deliberately smashed—or corroded by
chemicals.
Writing
equipment. Credit: Microsoft Research
Unlike data centers, the glass does
not require a climate-controlled environment, which would save energy.
Another advantage is that the glass
plates cannot be hacked or otherwise altered.
The Microsoft researchers
emphasized that future storage is important because the amount of data being
produced by humanity is now doubling roughly every three years.
'Carry the torch '
One of the glass plates holds the
equivalent of "about two million printed books or 5,000
ultra-high-definition 4K films", according to Feng Chen and Bo Wu,
researchers at Shandong University in China not involved in the study.
In a separate Nature article, the
pair warned there were more challenges ahead, including finding a way to write
the data faster, to mass produce the plates and to ensure people can easily
access and read the information.
However, they praised Silica for
creating a "viable solution for preserving the records of human
civilization".
"If implemented at scale, it
could represent a milestone in the history of knowledge storage, akin to oracle
bones, medieval parchment or the modern hard drive," they said.
"One day, a single piece of glass might carry the torch of human culture and knowledge across millennia."
Source: Laser-etched glass can store data for 10,000 years, Microsoft says



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