"Revolutionary DVD-Sized Disk Stores Petabit Capacity for Endless Movies"

TL;DR Summary
Scientists have developed a "super DVD" capable of holding a petabit of information, equivalent to approximately 125,000 gigabytes or nearly a quarter-million regular DVDs. This breakthrough in optical data storage involves printing information in 3D across hundreds of layers, surpassing the optical diffraction limit barrier. Aside from its potential environmental benefits, the super DVD offers the convenience of having an extensive collection of content readily available on a single disc, blurring the lines between physical media and streaming.
- A DVD that can hold a million movies? Yes, please! JoBlo.com
- DVD’s New Cousin Can Store More Than a Petabit IEEE Spectrum
- New DVD-Like Disc Holds More Movies Than You Can See in a Lifetime Newsweek
- A 3D nanoscale optical disk memory with petabit capacity Nature.com
- This DVD-sized disk can store a massive 125000 gigabytes of data Popular Science
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