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Forums - Nintendo - Nintendo considering holographic storage solution for Wii?

largedarryl said:
For some reason I doubt this will happen, money comes to mind.

 

Have you looked at Nintendo's finacial reports...  they have plenty of money to invest...



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This will be interesting. thetonstar's post makes it seem like Nintendo could make enough money for world domi...na.....

Oh crap. I don't want to hail emperor Regginator.......



Leatherhat on July 6th, 2012 3pm. Vita sales:"3 mil for COD 2 mil for AC. Maybe more. "  thehusbo on July 6th, 2012 5pm. Vita sales:"5 mil for COD 2.2 mil for AC."

Could games take full advantage of it? They should keep on being written targeting (almost) storageless Wiis too.
I can see better storage as welcome, but not essential, perhaps Wii2 will have it included, to widen its market, by then huge storage will be cheap enough to let Nintendo earn since the beginning even putting it on its next console and pricing it $250 at launch again.



Stwike him, Centuwion. Stwike him vewy wuffly! (Pontius Pilate, "Life of Brian")
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TGS, Third Grade Shooter: brand new genre invented by Kevin Butler exclusively for Natal WiiToo Kinect. PEW! PEW-PEW-PEW! 
 


As Mr. Dink from the cartoon Doug always says, "Very Expensive!"



Generation 8 Predictions so far.....(as of 9/2013)

Console that will sell most: Nintendo Wii U

Who will sell more consoles between Microsoft/SONY: SONY

 

puffy said:
stephen700 said:
HV card is not so usefull for distribuition becuase unlike vinyl records , Cd ,DVD and Blu-ray it cant be stamped.
To write the card requires a lengthy process - much like compact casette and VHS tape, wich is partly why these formats are replaced by optical disks.

 

 Perhaps but Nintendo seems to like solid state media formats and this will definately help with their fight against piracy

EDIT:

The technology is only expensive because nobody has mass-produced it. Before Sony and everybody began mass-producing the blu-ray player, it cost just as much.

Since nobody has stepped forward to actually push production of this concept, it's going to be ridiculously expensive.

Also, as nobody has done so, I'd really like to see where you guys are getting your numbers. Sounds like you're just pulling them out of your asses and you really haven't taken the time to know what the hell you're talking about.

 

Anyhow, here's some fun information about holographic storage:

 

(1) As it uses light instead of magnetism, electricity, etc, to store and relay its information, it is MUCH faster than current conventional storage concepts. Conventional storage has to read one bit at a time (which it may do VERY quickly, but it's still one after another after another). Holographic storage, however, can read millions of bits at once, therefore exponentially speeding things up.

(2) Holographic storage is theorized to be able to store "tens of terabits" per cubic centimeter (in other words, one hell of a lot in a tiny space). Currently, inPhase Technologies has reported 500GB per cubic inch, but that was two years ago and they've surely made progress since then. Even so, 500GB in a cubic inch of space = TITANIC.

(3) The concept has been around for over forty years, with actual examples of the tech existing as far back as the late '90s. It's taken a while to reach commercial plausibility mainly because it's such a drastic difference from standard technology.

(4) Nintendo and inPhase have filed a patent together for some sort of holographic storage technology. With that said, we may be seeing a holographic storage solution released for the Wii, with Nintendo's next console using holographic storage for everything. If Nintendo does this, it'll mean two things. One, they'll be the pioneers of this revolutionary tech. Being such a big company in such a big market means huge influence. If Nintendo really does utilize this, and they're able to keep costs minimal, this technology will see guaranteed public acceptance. Two, since they'll be the pioneers of the tech, if they do it right, Nintendo will become tenfold the company they are today. This tech alone could very possibly cause Nintendo to grow to compete with Sony and Microsoft at the worldwide corporate influence level - far beyond just their videogame divisions.

See, it all depends on who utilizes it first. If done right, marketed right, produced right, etc, Nintendo could set the standard behind commercial holographic data storage. That would result in THEM owning a part in all holographic storage sold in the future. And if they market and produce it right, making it practical enough for the everyday consumer, then worldwide acceptance is guaranteed.

This is potentially big. This is potentially very big.

 

This is an interesting way to look at it and I'm sure that this high amount of storage would lend itself well to that Ultra HD I've been hearing about but that's a long way off and is Nintendo a company that would be interested in having a media standard? I would have thought they prefer keeping it an in house standard due to piracy but if there is a major amount of cash and brand name power to be made who knows what they may do..

I agree with the first bold.

Disagree with the second, I just don't see it coming so shortly.

Thrid bold: Nintendo is already a bigger company than Sony.

 

 



I would cite regulation, but I know you will simply ignore it.

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hmm wow, holograms



I can see the draw of using really high-tech stuff, but doesn't that kind of fly against what Nintendo has been doing of late?

--

I mean, they have made some very innovative stuff and I give them credit for it, but none of their current properties (Wii/DS) are really high-tech in the sense of being state of the art. Motion controls are great, but the technology behind it is not exactly earth-shattering. It's the implementation that makes it great, not the hardware.

Seeing that all of the current Wii/DS stuff is like that (relatively simple technology applied in very innovative ways to get maximum bang for the buck) I fail to see why so many on this site think that they'll suddenly start delivering holographic memory next or a Wii-HD with vastly improved GFX/processing power.

Didn't they just prove they don't have to do that to still beat the competition?
Wouldn't using a high-tech solution to solve a problem only very few Wii owners actually have be a waste of resources?
And wouldn't designing an Uber HD console play straight into MS/Sony's hand, who despite being the underdogs this console race have consistently outperformed Nintendo in that area the last few years?

(apologies for the length)



My dad has a cool holograph in his den. It shows a telescope with a nightime starry setting and if you look into the optical of the telescope you can see an alien spaceship landing haha



What the heck does that mean?



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Holographic storage? What is it?