I mean I was 4 when I first played Minecraft for the xbox 360 in 2012 and I first played GTA V when I was 5/6 on the ps3 in 2013, and I have a job and can drive now.
So? What's so crazy about that? It's 2025 already. I know time flies and I also sometimes think "damn, it's not 2001 anymore?" but yeah, people born after 2000 are adult already.
you know time has flown by when youtubers have to explain to the audience what a DVD is. I was star struck for a moment because I genuinely forgot that people no longer buy games on discs, and if they do, there's usually only an online activation code inside. I still buy used games by going to a physical media shop, simply an amazing experience, and after that you even have a cool plastic box to put on your shelf :3
No. Need higher. Can get typical portable HDDS at 5TB. These discs will most likely used as archive for prosumers so 100~200TB is the range. The whole "xx storage amount is enough" statement when it comes to technology is nonsense. because if that were actually true, we'd all be stuck still using 400MB discs.
Here's a (rough) explanation. I'll provide some more info on how disc data is stored, mainly to have it wrote down and easier to reference. Discs are stored in pits (and lands). Each pit has a certain constant size. There are a bunch of pits and lands lined up, and in a circular formation. These pits can be stacked on top of each other, each "stack" called a layer. Now there are also another set of pits lined up in a circular formation, this time the radius of the circle they form smaller than the last. This repeats until the center of the disc. The distance between each "circle" of pits is called the track pitch. On a blu-ray disc, the laser readers on normal discs typically are on the wavelength 405 nm, on the disc itself has about 2 layers, 0.15 micrometers pit sizes, 0.36nm track pitch, and can read only 1 wavelength (405 nanometers). In the video, he said the 200TB discs use multi-wavelength lasers, and on the disc each pit has certain reflective material designed to be read at specific wavelengths, thus increasing the amount of data readable per pit. Let's say such laser can read every wavelength in the visible light spectrum, with a resolution of 10 nm, would make about 30 different readable wavelengths as opposed to the singular wavelength on any other disc. There are also 200 different layers of pits. Since we have high-end equipment, lets say our 200TB disc is 0.1μm pit size and 0.1μm track pitch. The formula for storage on a disc is (N*A*η)/8, where N is the number of layers, A is the area of the usable storage surface, η is the data density (bits per unit area), and 8 is the conversion factor to account for bits to bytes. The average surface area of a disc is 9.31400 * 10⁹ μm², or 14.44 square inches. The data density is calculated by 1/(pit size * track pitch), which equates to 100 bits / μm². Plugging the calculations in, we get 2.328 * 10¹² bytes. Because we can read 30 different wavelengths, multiply the value by 30 and we get 6.984 * 10¹³, or roughly 70 TB. This isn't 200 TB, but I'm almost certain I did some of the calculations wrong, for example the 30 wavelengths probably are exponential and not linear, and we also do not know the exact constants of the 200TB disc. But those are the most accurate calculations I could do. You're welcome!
@@PiotrBarcz I think you would need very high-end equipment and also have to be extremely careful with the disc, even touching the surface could corrupt it. But I'm sure with enough time these could be consumer-safe. But I also think there will be 200TB hard drives too within that time. But we can never be sure.
@@arcadesmasher I mean M-Disc in particular is said to be able to store data for 1000 years. The disk surface can be cleaned and error correction is good enough that I think for most files it'll be more than adequate (considering no moving parts) for long term storage. The next best long term storage medium would be Seagate's Exos 24 TB HDDs since they're cheapish.
0:38 "Video games weren't just downloaded online" In 2010, yes they were. Steam, PS3, and 360 already had pretty well established online stores at that point.
Agreed. Even the 90's had games you could download online. The mass adoption of the internet just made it more accessable and commonly practiced over time.
A tiny scratch won't make a CD/DVD/Bluray unreadable on that part because they all have error correction codes. Unless it happens to align exactly with a track since most recoverable errors happen with scratches of any other direction. And of course, many scratches in any direction can make it unreadable too.
2006? We’re birthyear buddies! - anyways, yeah, as an electrical engineering student I must admit, I thought the disc format was over until I saw this. there’s hope for my childhood format.
@@VerxxYT The only difference is that the BDXLs come in M Disc Variants, which are discs that are supposed to last 1000 years (M for Millenia). My SD Card from 10-15 years ago is starting to get a little old, and while 15 years isnt bad, its nothing in comparison to 1000 years.
@@ProgrammingProAwire Well, don't use it for valuable data, if enough bits fail it wouldn't be able to reconstruct the information and if one of those wrong bits is part of the firmware the whole card will die.
"BACK IN MY DAY" It was 2010, download on consoles had been a thing since 2004 with the PSP, Xbox 360 Wii and PS3 all had em at launch. Though 360 took a while to allow full game downloads... Dude c'mon. Downloading games was a thing even in the 90s.
It was a thing kind of, definitely not the norm.. I think steam back in the day definitely started normalizing games purchased and downloaded over the net
I've heard it's partially due to read times that prevent the disc from releasing, which a quick solution would be to add in additional laser assemblies to read in parallel rather than only one stream at a time, provided the hardware can gather and process all of the data within a reasonable timeframe, though the upfront cost of the drive may increase by a lot as a result due to how difficult it would be to make them. Similar to early CD games, like Lego Island as one example, data are streamed directly from the disc to reduce the required space on the hard drives of the time. Using a solid state drive, like Optane due to more rewrites without wearing it out, could be more ideal for that much to be streamed in as needed while keeping every similar data form together with multiple assemblies rather than requiring interleaving and possibly multiple copies of the same data with only one. While one or multiple are used at a time, the other(s) could be positioned where they're needed in advance to reduce the seek time and switched over to read from there when needed. I'm thinking 2-4 of them in a drive should be plenty.
@@JustJoryit definitely wouldn’t be fun but companies have solved this problem already, folio photonics (the company developing this optical disc) will most likely put it in a caddy like: early CD-ROM, most variants of DVD-RAM, early 2003 Blu-Ray and it’s professional spin-off Professional Disc. Or even have a cartridge to hold multiple discs like Sony’s Optical Disc Archive
Haha, reminds me of my time as a young teenager, still learning about tech but trying to make my own conclusions. I also had a disc, that wouldn't work anymore due to scratches. So me as Mr. smartypants thought, okay then I need something transparent as a protective layer on the disc. So I took some transparent tape and put it all over the surface of a working game. Yeah no surprise, didn't work anymore. So I took the tape off, but it left lots of residue and trying to clean that off killed that disc too. So I destroyed a working game but learned many things in that process. At a later time, I wanted to experiment, with how severe scratches a game could still work. Took a game I wouldn't miss and some scissors. The thing is, the software can compensate for even very damn deep grooves in the plastic - if those grooves are straight from the inside to the outside. If those grooves follow the lines where the laser would read while spinning, it stopped working a lot faster. Also fun fact: Normally, discs get written to from the inside to the outside. So when not all the space on a disc is needed, the outter areas stay blank. So you can cut off those areas and the disc would still work. Just be aware, that then it probably can't spin properly anymore due to uneven weight and depending on the drive, may not work anyway. Yeah, a lot of stupid stuff could be done with optical media. I still have full boxes with blank CDs, DVDs and Blurays laying around here. They are barely ever needed, but every now and then, I can use them for security copies. At least the Blurays, the other discs are a little too limited in space for modern use.......
if such a disc were Rewritable it'd Definitely be THE ULTIMATE storage for my setup to use because my current collection can be all stored on it with room to spare
Wow 1PB probably be very conivent for large game worlds in large servers such as minecraft. Fun fact: In theory a human brain could hold at most is 2.5 PB or 250 years of TV information in their life time if you managed to lived that long that is.
Great video! I also own a PS2 and it's always a delight playing games from it. Knowing how fragile discs are though, I wonder if some part of them has error correction like in QR codes. It sounds like it would be needed for the newer generation of discs that, having more layers and smaller bumps, are more fragile than their earlier iterations.
Nice job, this is one of the best summaries of optical media I've seen.👏 Fun fact - there are also 4 layer BluRays which hold 128GB but they are not very common. I bought 5 pack of them from Japan but yet to burn one to test if it works 😁
@@PiotrBarcz I use it for 5 years now to burn occasionally and it still works fine. I also have LG BP55EB40 external drive as a backup to be able to read everything in the distant future.
@@MrRoko91 Very nice! I've been thinking of getting an internal read write drive for my computer because it's got a bay for one and sometimes do stuff with discs so it might be worth it at some point.
> 2125 > Look! What a an obsolete technology we've found! > Yeah, right... I can't believe that this thing held only 200TB... My tiniest cheap brain chip can hold 1000 times more of than that
The whole time I'm watching this I'm just thinking... The amount of damage one scratch would do on such a disc... Also, R.I.P. your PS2. System launched the year that I was born, so I feel your pain.
The intro reminds me of a glitch in skylanders trap team wii where it crashed if you didnt beat the dreamcatcher level fast enough and this was on EVERY DISC. I was sad when this happened to me
"Back in my day video games weren't just downloaded online and played instantly" Yes, they were? You are talking about early 2010's not 2000's, that was already very common.
Thats kinda crazy, i still have a few cd's with 700mb, but they are completly Black, can someone explain me why? Or if it improves something? Btw good Video.
Bro could fit the entire MCU and James Bond series in a 200TB disc... Then again, that only takes up.... Like, 10TB at most if you use the 4K versions..
A scratch wont corrupt the data because of error correction. You probably scratched it time and time again and eventually damaged it so much the error correction couldnt fix it.
Cool, now I just have to wait until they actually get these things out to the public so we can say screw M-Disc and have actually good long term archival optical media.
>2010
>4
>2025
>looks like a 35 year old already
agreed this guy doesnt look 19
Meanwhile I'm 17 and i looks like 14
@@matgaw123I can relate, I'm 15 but people think I'm 12
@matgaw123 yeah I'm 18 and I still look like a 14 year old ;-;
@@Youcican Damm
That must suck ):
>2010
>four years old
First time I’ve seen someone younger than me talk about their childhood.
I'm still suffering from the "90s were 10 years ago" syndrome.
Crap, same boat…
@@panthera8286my mind is still in 2011 fr
I mean I was 4 when I first played Minecraft for the xbox 360 in 2012 and I first played GTA V when I was 5/6 on the ps3 in 2013, and I have a job and can drive now.
wait isn't this my age.... lmao
What do you mean you were born in 2006?!?!
So? What's so crazy about that? It's 2025 already. I know time flies and I also sometimes think "damn, it's not 2001 anymore?" but yeah, people born after 2000 are adult already.
I am 19 years old but still younger than him.
My car is older than him 😅
I'm of his same age but I look like his son
I was born at the start of 2007 and look like a brat. This guy is on a aging Speedrun 🔥
2006?? bruh you look 30 not 18
yea we shouldn't overdo it. at 19 reading comments like these en masse can't be too good for the psyche. keep it down a little with the observations.
@@VinnyUnion Just turn off the screen then
In our class at 18 we had clones of the same guy, a glass and a beard makes you look older but his skin has no wrinkles and seems young.
Hes european thats why yall
yeah, i am 2006 kid, and i look like gen alpha or something skibidi rizz idk
you know time has flown by when youtubers have to explain to the audience what a DVD is.
I was star struck for a moment because I genuinely forgot that people no longer buy games on discs, and if they do, there's usually only an online activation code inside. I still buy used games by going to a physical media shop, simply an amazing experience, and after that you even have a cool plastic box to put on your shelf :3
Fr, and if you want you can return the game or get an exchange aftwr an unlinited amount of time.
Honestly we need just 1-5TB discs at most, if it’s about consumer grade stuff
You're definitely not owning a 100 megapixel camera, let alone a 400 mp camera. But yeah, however you call yourself a "consumer". :)
@ ok
No.
Need higher. Can get typical portable HDDS at 5TB.
These discs will most likely used as archive for prosumers so 100~200TB is the range.
The whole "xx storage amount is enough" statement when it comes to technology is nonsense.
because if that were actually true, we'd all be stuck still using 400MB discs.
@@suoquainen ok
@@TheOnlyPedroGameplays I need my videos dude
When these become affordable, I’m definitely getting them
So, how does 200TB fit in an Optical Disc? I thought there would at least be some popular science explanation of what these reflections are about.
Here's a (rough) explanation. I'll provide some more info on how disc data is stored, mainly to have it wrote down and easier to reference.
Discs are stored in pits (and lands). Each pit has a certain constant size. There are a bunch of pits and lands lined up, and in a circular formation. These pits can be stacked on top of each other, each "stack" called a layer. Now there are also another set of pits lined up in a circular formation, this time the radius of the circle they form smaller than the last. This repeats until the center of the disc. The distance between each "circle" of pits is called the track pitch.
On a blu-ray disc, the laser readers on normal discs typically are on the wavelength 405 nm, on the disc itself has about 2 layers, 0.15 micrometers pit sizes, 0.36nm track pitch, and can read only 1 wavelength (405 nanometers). In the video, he said the 200TB discs use multi-wavelength lasers, and on the disc each pit has certain reflective material designed to be read at specific wavelengths, thus increasing the amount of data readable per pit. Let's say such laser can read every wavelength in the visible light spectrum, with a resolution of 10 nm, would make about 30 different readable wavelengths as opposed to the singular wavelength on any other disc. There are also 200 different layers of pits. Since we have high-end equipment, lets say our 200TB disc is 0.1μm pit size and 0.1μm track pitch. The formula for storage on a disc is (N*A*η)/8, where N is the number of layers, A is the area of the usable storage surface, η is the data density (bits per unit area), and 8 is the conversion factor to account for bits to bytes. The average surface area of a disc is 9.31400 * 10⁹ μm², or 14.44 square inches. The data density is calculated by 1/(pit size * track pitch), which equates to 100 bits / μm². Plugging the calculations in, we get 2.328 * 10¹² bytes. Because we can read 30 different wavelengths, multiply the value by 30 and we get 6.984 * 10¹³, or roughly 70 TB. This isn't 200 TB, but I'm almost certain I did some of the calculations wrong, for example the 30 wavelengths probably are exponential and not linear, and we also do not know the exact constants of the 200TB disc. But those are the most accurate calculations I could do. You're welcome!
@ Wow, thank you for this detailed answer.
@@arcadesmasher 70 TB? Jesus I hope they get these out soon, I want these so bad, they would solve so many problems!
@@PiotrBarcz I think you would need very high-end equipment and also have to be extremely careful with the disc, even touching the surface could corrupt it. But I'm sure with enough time these could be consumer-safe. But I also think there will be 200TB hard drives too within that time. But we can never be sure.
@@arcadesmasher I mean M-Disc in particular is said to be able to store data for 1000 years. The disk surface can be cleaned and error correction is good enough that I think for most files it'll be more than adequate (considering no moving parts) for long term storage.
The next best long term storage medium would be Seagate's Exos 24 TB HDDs since they're cheapish.
babe wake up The Unqaulified Tutor uploaded
0:38 "Video games weren't just downloaded online" In 2010, yes they were. Steam, PS3, and 360 already had pretty well established online stores at that point.
He had a ps2 , in 2010 .
Agreed. Even the 90's had games you could download online. The mass adoption of the internet just made it more accessable and commonly practiced over time.
A tiny scratch won't make a CD/DVD/Bluray unreadable on that part because they all have error correction codes. Unless it happens to align exactly with a track since most recoverable errors happen with scratches of any other direction. And of course, many scratches in any direction can make it unreadable too.
Small scratches would do nothing, it’s mainly larger ones that will cause issues. I wish DVDs came with caddies like dvd ram
While that's true, it _would_ be easier to screw up a 200TB disk because you're damaging so much data in the same space.
@ Error correction codes can be designed around that.
Man I don’t even have body hair how are we the same age
Well, you are gay.
@@jm036 i think your parents didnt love you.
@@jm036 how does that correlate at all LMFAO
@@JustJory their pfp says so fr
@@JustJoryI agree, how does it correlate?
2006? We’re birthyear buddies! -
anyways, yeah, as an electrical engineering student I must admit, I thought the disc format was over until I saw this. there’s hope for my childhood format.
You are children 😂. I was born in 1992.
2:19, a company on amazon claims to have made 128 GB Blu rays, 32 GB x 4 Layers. I havent actually tested them cause its $200 USD for a pack of 50.
Might as well get an sd card for cheaper, smaller and more durability.
@@VerxxYT The only difference is that the BDXLs come in M Disc Variants, which are discs that are supposed to last 1000 years (M for Millenia). My SD Card from 10-15 years ago is starting to get a little old, and while 15 years isnt bad, its nothing in comparison to 1000 years.
@@ProgrammingProAwire Well, don't use it for valuable data, if enough bits fail it wouldn't be able to reconstruct the information and if one of those wrong bits is part of the firmware the whole card will die.
Sony was making them for years but way more expensive, and it seems they only sell them inside Japan because on eBay all were from Japanese sellers
@@ProgrammingProAwire true. Longevity is vital depending on needs.
the pain at the end is Peter Griffin's knee pain lol
"BACK IN MY DAY" It was 2010, download on consoles had been a thing since 2004 with the PSP, Xbox 360 Wii and PS3 all had em at launch. Though 360 took a while to allow full game downloads... Dude c'mon. Downloading games was a thing even in the 90s.
It was a thing kind of, definitely not the norm.. I think steam back in the day definitely started normalizing games purchased and downloaded over the net
"back in my dayyy" 😭😭😭😭
Great, now I can store half of my brain in it
Lol good one
i dont think 4.7 GB could hold a single AAA game in 2010
thats why they came with 2nd installer disks
Duel layer exists and most of them came with 1 or 2 disks
The 360 was using DVD it’s whole life
It's sort of between the PS2 and PS3 era tbh
@@NolanEgbert at the end of it's life it used 2 discs, one to install the game, the other to launchnit
>born in 2010
> 0:35 "back in my day"
Good lord I'm getting old.
I've heard it's partially due to read times that prevent the disc from releasing, which a quick solution would be to add in additional laser assemblies to read in parallel rather than only one stream at a time, provided the hardware can gather and process all of the data within a reasonable timeframe, though the upfront cost of the drive may increase by a lot as a result due to how difficult it would be to make them. Similar to early CD games, like Lego Island as one example, data are streamed directly from the disc to reduce the required space on the hard drives of the time. Using a solid state drive, like Optane due to more rewrites without wearing it out, could be more ideal for that much to be streamed in as needed while keeping every similar data form together with multiple assemblies rather than requiring interleaving and possibly multiple copies of the same data with only one. While one or multiple are used at a time, the other(s) could be positioned where they're needed in advance to reduce the seek time and switched over to read from there when needed. I'm thinking 2-4 of them in a drive should be plenty.
This guy is the same age as me, but he looks like he could be my dad
@2:23 not the 🌈"𝓕𝓪𝓫𝓾𝓵𝓸𝓾𝓼" for _"Multi-wavelength LASER(s)"_ 😂
🌈💃🏻 👬 👭 LASERS
Tell this to the videogame manufacturers
Noice, this is perfect for digital hoarders
imagine how bad it would be to have a single scratch on the disc LOL
We have tape storage for that already.
@@JustJoryit definitely wouldn’t be fun but companies have solved this problem already, folio photonics (the company developing this optical disc) will most likely put it in a caddy like: early CD-ROM, most variants of DVD-RAM, early 2003 Blu-Ray and it’s professional spin-off Professional Disc. Or even have a cartridge to hold multiple discs like Sony’s Optical Disc Archive
"Dude I think you mean your kid was born in 2010 and for you, you look like youre from 2006 BC
Haha, reminds me of my time as a young teenager, still learning about tech but trying to make my own conclusions. I also had a disc, that wouldn't work anymore due to scratches. So me as Mr. smartypants thought, okay then I need something transparent as a protective layer on the disc. So I took some transparent tape and put it all over the surface of a working game. Yeah no surprise, didn't work anymore. So I took the tape off, but it left lots of residue and trying to clean that off killed that disc too. So I destroyed a working game but learned many things in that process.
At a later time, I wanted to experiment, with how severe scratches a game could still work. Took a game I wouldn't miss and some scissors. The thing is, the software can compensate for even very damn deep grooves in the plastic - if those grooves are straight from the inside to the outside. If those grooves follow the lines where the laser would read while spinning, it stopped working a lot faster.
Also fun fact: Normally, discs get written to from the inside to the outside. So when not all the space on a disc is needed, the outter areas stay blank. So you can cut off those areas and the disc would still work. Just be aware, that then it probably can't spin properly anymore due to uneven weight and depending on the drive, may not work anyway.
Yeah, a lot of stupid stuff could be done with optical media. I still have full boxes with blank CDs, DVDs and Blurays laying around here. They are barely ever needed, but every now and then, I can use them for security copies. At least the Blurays, the other discs are a little too limited in space for modern use.......
Fin Balor doing side quests here
if such a disc were Rewritable it'd Definitely be THE ULTIMATE storage for my setup to use because my current collection can be all stored on it with room to spare
Wow 1PB probably be very conivent for large game worlds in large servers such as minecraft.
Fun fact: In theory a human brain could hold at most is 2.5 PB or 250 years of TV information in their life time if you managed to lived that long that is.
I was interested in how a DVD works a few months ago, thanks for the details.
Man, it's hard to believe that even the Blu-ray disc is almost two decades old now, about as old as you!
Fill thousands of 200TB dvds with memes and spread then in every park.
Great video! I also own a PS2 and it's always a delight playing games from it. Knowing how fragile discs are though, I wonder if some part of them has error correction like in QR codes. It sounds like it would be needed for the newer generation of discs that, having more layers and smaller bumps, are more fragile than their earlier iterations.
Nice job, this is one of the best summaries of optical media I've seen.👏
Fun fact - there are also 4 layer BluRays which hold 128GB but they are not very common. I bought 5 pack of them from Japan but yet to burn one to test if it works 😁
Probably need a special burner to do it?
@@PiotrBarcz not very special - my ASUS BW-16D1HT can burn it (according to specs) and its only $100 burner.
@@MrRoko91 Ooo interesting! I might have to look into those, I wonder what the longevity is like?
@@PiotrBarcz I use it for 5 years now to burn occasionally and it still works fine. I also have LG BP55EB40 external drive as a backup to be able to read everything in the distant future.
@@MrRoko91 Very nice! I've been thinking of getting an internal read write drive for my computer because it's got a bay for one and sometimes do stuff with discs so it might be worth it at some point.
I guess it is worth getting M-Disc versions of this for archival purposes.
> 2125
> Look! What a an obsolete technology we've found!
> Yeah, right... I can't believe that this thing held only 200TB... My tiniest cheap brain chip can hold 1000 times more of than that
More like 10^1000 times that.
I remember this CD cream saving me multiple times with PS2 games
This guy is younger than me and i still can't even grow a mustache yet
I recently saw another video about this kind of disc, which said it hadn't been fully developed yet.
why not just put the disc in an encasing like a hdd?
bro aint no way you're 19... making my 23 yr old ass feel old....
The whole time I'm watching this I'm just thinking... The amount of damage one scratch would do on such a disc...
Also, R.I.P. your PS2. System launched the year that I was born, so I feel your pain.
Mannnnn, i was just listening to the vid while starting to fall asleep and then the pipe sfx messed it all up 😂😂
With expensive, million dollar femtosecond lasers. 120 TB SSDs with much better random access speeds were also released recently
Next call of duty game is probably gonna require more storage than google has.
i did not expect someone who was 4 in 2010 to look like this, i mean damn brother
The intro reminds me of a glitch in skylanders trap team wii where it crashed if you didnt beat the dreamcatcher level fast enough and this was on EVERY DISC. I was sad when this happened to me
"Back in my day video games weren't just downloaded online and played instantly"
Yes, they were? You are talking about early 2010's not 2000's, that was already very common.
you used a laser disc to show the standar opitcal disc? kinda q few years older than the standard disc haha 😊
Why do i feel like i've seen this video before
Imagine he has child then the child says in 2025 i was 3. That would be so post-nostalgic 💀
2:59 1TB is 1024GB and 1PB is 1024TB beacuse 1byte = 8bit
Wrong
@new_simsons why
@@FEHERONE1 1tb = 1000gb ect. But 1tib =1024 gib
@new_simsons reversed. 1GB = 1024MB, 1GiB (or 1Gbit) = 1000MB. If you dont trust me then google it
@new_simsons reversed. 1TiB = 1000 GiB, but 1TB = 1024GB. If you dont trust to me then google it up
1:30 the absolute dunk at cod and generally huge storage taking games 😂
Okay but what's the read/write speed
pearl from rain world go brrrr
1995 for DVDs? No, they came out in 96. Where did you get 95 from?
Would this be a cheaper solution to hard drives? And wouldn't it be faster
Definitely not faster.
First video that has my exact humor. Maybe because I was also born in 2006 I guess
What about read and write speeds
"In 2010 when I was just 4 years old"
Am I gonna watch a video made by a child? Wait....
**does math**
This upsets me.
"The first CDs"? As opposed to what supposed "other ones"?
Thats kinda crazy, i still have a few cd's with 700mb, but they are completly Black, can someone explain me why? Or if it improves something?
Btw good Video.
I wouldn't trust it to archive 200TB of data. But if I had a 100GB file, then I might trust it to store 2000 copies
A "physical DVD"? As opposed to what supposedly "other kind of DVD"?
3:00
Is it enough to hold Modern Warfare
Bro could fit the entire MCU and James Bond series in a 200TB disc...
Then again, that only takes up.... Like, 10TB at most if you use the 4K versions..
Bruh I feel old, I got my DS in 2006 when I was a kid ;d
There is no way you're the same age as myself
You look like 2004
Nah, he looks more like 30 then 20 (^-^)
One Scratch And ByeBye For The Rest Of The 3 GB
A scratch wont corrupt the data because of error correction. You probably scratched it time and time again and eventually damaged it so much the error correction couldnt fix it.
you’re… you’re only a year older than me… time is passing and i’m scared please help me
2:17 Actually, it's CD-R, DVD-ROM and DVD-R single layer. =)
2:25 It's DVD-RW.
Why should we buy the gold disc,original,not the purple disc..
I remember I had a copy of half life 1 for the ps2 and it froze on the map load I could somehow get to the training course
Does it though? Project silica blah blah okay but if it isn’t commercially available for me then it doesn’t exist to me
It would amazing because games would have the full file on it
I need all the TBs
I miss my ps2 too man; you should try out Rayman 3 if you ever get another(Its nowhere as fun on PC, I tried)
And we would probably only get 80 minutes of music
Dude is younger than me?! (2003)
Why I think this was a Yeezus review
did you know THQ Nordic remade that Spongebob game?
Store all those memes and then you accidentally drop it and now it has one scratch on it but it a big one.
ok but can you burn the disks locally? like how would that work
also "2010" like dayum... my sister be older than you wtf
You weren’t really playing BFBB in 2010. Unplugged controller, hardly sentient, seventh gen already out.
Yo I have a ps2 working with everything but I broke the controller now its just dusting in my room
What do you mean that you're only one year older than me😭
No way in hell is a kid born in 2006 just hit me with back in my day, mf back in your day I was already 15.
I hope Japan finishes making those disks since they are the only country that cares about about this stuff
"4yo in 2010"
Mf you look 30 😂
So we got 200TB discs and AI brainrot but no flying cars, ouch.
Flying cars exist, they're called airplanes
Cool, now I just have to wait until they actually get these things out to the public so we can say screw M-Disc and have actually good long term archival optical media.
I’m not sure how long lasting those are. Most single layer media imo is the most reliable.
Well, even if this technology finds its way to homes or even the industry, it will be very prone to losing track with the smallest shake.
hdd will probably use the new 200tb optical disks oh.... dvds are immutable
No, because hard disks are magnetic.
It just doesn't seem to be reliable, maybe if it had some kind of cover? similar to UMD/PlayStation Portable disc or something.
If you consider that Steam already existed in 2004, then most of your problems are in choosing a console....
You're a year younger than me! People our age can have that complete of a beard?
Yes if you're white
my ps2 runs gentoo.
3:08
FUNNY