Title: Emerging Technologies 2006
1Emerging Technologies 2006
ARMA 2005
- Jesse Wilkins
- September 20, 2005
- Session T022?
2Agenda
- Blogs, Wikis, and RSS, Oh My!
- Barcodes in the 21st Century
- Keeping More Stuff Longer
3Blogs, Wikis, and RSS, Oh My!
- Basics of Blogging
- Wiki-Wiki
- Really Simple Syndication
- Whats next
4Basics of Blogging
- Started as online diaries
- Hides complexity of Web publishing
- Blogs are collaborative and allow for comments
- Easy to link to other pages
- If the CEO is blogging, is it a record?
- Maybe.
- Review comments periodically
- Track changes to postings, comments
- Document reason for changes
5The Seattle ARMA Blog
6Informata a RIM blog
7Blogging the dashboard
8Blogging creating a post
9Technorati the blog search engine
10Technorati results
11Wiki-Wiki
- Allows collaborative editing of content
- Easy to add content
- Easy to correct mistakes
- Hides complexity of HTML from users
- Wikipedia 700,000 articles
- Wiktionary 10,000 definitions
- Wikiquote 5,000 quotes
12Wiki and RM
- Wikis are excellent for collaboration
- Changes tracked automatically
- Need to save logs of changes
- Periodically may need to clean up
- Spam comments/articles
- Outdated materials
13Wikipedia
14Wikipedia contd
15Katrina visual wiki
16Katrina wiki contd
17Katrina wiki contd
18Katrina wiki contd
19Really Simple Syndication
- Make changed items readily available
- Uses XML to store information, metadata
- Makes it easy for users to find your content
- Repurpose the data
- Most blogs and some wikis support RSS natively
- May need to keep record of what published and
when it was published
20RSS the XML
21RSS feeds in an aggregator
22Whats next?
- Podcasting
- Vlogging
- Moblogging
23Barcodes in the 21st Century
- Invisible Bar Codes
- Color Bar Codes
- Bar Codes for Digital Preservation
24Invisible barcodes
- Concealogram
- An image encrypted into another image
- Can be printed and read by optical reader
- Dataglyphs
- 1 KB of data per square inch of image
- Looks like halftone
- Can be used to authenticate printed document
- Invisible Ink
- 1D and 2D barcodes, readable using UV light
25Sample dataglyph
Jesse Wilkins Emerging Technologies 2006 ARMA
2006 Conference
26Bitonal Dataglyph
27Color Dataglyph
28Color barcodes
- hueCode
- Up to 40,000 bytes/sq. in
- Proprietary
- UltraCode
- Very simple bitonal or color 2D barcode
- Public domain
29Barcodes for digital preservation
- Several experimental efforts under way to convert
binary to 2D and/or color barcode - Use data-dense barcodes
- Make them page-sized (or multiple glyphs)
- Write them out to microfilm or microfiche
- Or print them
- And do the same with the applications required to
access them
30Keeping More Stuff Longer
- Overview
- Multilayer Storage Technologies
- Update Holographic Storage
- Hybrid Optical Storage
- Whats next
31Keeping More Stuff Longer
- 5 exabytes of information created in 2004
- More emails sent in a day than the USPS delivers
in a year - IM will outstrip email by 2007
- Digital video
32Multilayer storage technologies
- Dual-layer HD DVD-ROM available today
- 30 GB per disc
- Dual-layer Blu-Ray available today
- 50 GB per disc
- Triple-layer HD DVD-ROM
- 45 GB per disc
- Toshiba
- Quad-layer Blu-Ray Disc
- 100 GB per disc
- TDK, Sony available 2007
- 8-layer Blu-Ray Disc
- 200 GB per disc
33Toshiba tri-layer BRD
34Update Holographic storage
- ECMA forms committee to standardize holographic
information storage systems - Optware
- Six companies form HVD Alliance
- 30 GB holographic storage card
- Roadmap up to 3.9 TB per disk
- Availability 2007?
- Inphase
- 300GB per disk at launch
- Roadmap Up to 1.6 TB per disk
- General availability end of 2006
35Optware HVD
36Optware 30GB storage card
37Hybrid optical storage
- Phillips triple optical pickup devices
- CD, DVDR(DL)/RW, Blu-Ray Disk
- Toshiba
- Double-sided, dual-layer hybrid ROM
- One side HD DVD 30GB
- One side DVD 8.5GB
- Single-sided, dual-layer hybrid ROM
- One layer HD DVD 15GB
- One layer DVD 4.7GB
38Toshiba dual-layer hybrid
39Whats next?
- Multiplexed Optical Data Storage (MODS)
- 1 TB per 4.72 disk
- Articulated Optical DVD (AO-DVD)
- 250-850GB per 4.72 disk
- Nano-grating DVD (NG-DVD)
- Ultraviolet-laser optical storage
- 500 GB per disc
40Whats next contd
- High Density ROM (HD-ROM)
- 165 GB per disc
- Microfilm storage at the molecular level!
- IBM Millipede nanometer-scale
- 100 GB in a SD card form factor
- punch cards!
- Paper Blu-Ray Discs
- 51 paper
- 25 GB per disc
- More secure just cut it up!
41Questions?
42For more information
- Jesse Wilkins
- CDIA, EDP, LIT/ERM, ICP
- IMERGE Consulting
- (303) 574-1455
- jesse.wilkins_at_imergeconsult.com
- http//www.imergeconsult.com