Sentences with phrase «exabytes of»

The company says that people record 3.5 exabytes of video every year, or 50,000 years worth of footage, so it was time to focus on the video recording aspects of the camera.
Improved software is the best hardware upgrade: soon APFS in iOS 10.3 will free up exabytes of storage pic.twitter.com/UN 7BsBnDXQ
As with most things Windows related, the scale of these services is huge (we have 5 acres of build machines and move 35 exabytes of data per day for source, build, and testing activities.)
The data density of DNA - based data storage is rather impressive: a single gram of DNA storage can hold 455 exabytes of data.
Mobile traffic has grown 18 fold in the past 5 years alone to reach 7.2 exabytes of data per month.
A current research focus is the development of clinical - quality applications for processing massive data sets spanning millions of individuals across collaborating organizations, eventually encompassing exabytes of data.
At six words — which is still not long enough to produce natural speech — a computer would need to devour 10 trillion exabytes of information.
Today about 2 billion people access the Web regularly, zipping untold exabytes of data (that's 1018 pieces of information) through copper and fiber lines around the world.
Think of it this way — five exabytes of content were created between the birth of the world and 2003.
In 2013, 5 exabytes of content were created each day.
In fact, More than 2.5 exabytes of data is added to the internet everyday.
Using DNA, Strauss says, it will be possible to store 1 exabyte of data — that's 1 billion GB — in a 1 - inch cube.
The first case study for this pipeline is the reconstruction of an entire adult shrewmouse brain, which, they estimate, will produce one exabyte of data, or one billion gigabytes.

Not exact matches

Internet traffic, the world's biggest maker of networking gear predicts, will quadruple and reach 80.5 exabytes per month (80 exabytes would fill 20 billion DVDs) by 2015.
It would need about 200 exabytes (about 200 million terabytes) of data to heat a gram of water by just a single degree Celsius — an overwhelming demand for data storage.
In 2007 the amount of data was estimated to be 281 exabytes — 2.25 x 1021 bits, which, for those of us more earthbound, is a million times more data than is hosted by the Library of Congress and is equivalent to 281 trillion digitized novels.
Studies forecast the amount of information created and copied in 2010 will surge more than six fold to 988 exabytes, a compound annual growth rate of 57 %.
During the same period, the number of e-mails sent grew three times faster than the number of people e-mailing; in 2006 just the e-mail traffic from one person to another — i.e., excluding spam — accounted for 6 exabytes.
Project Infinite is in the same ecosystem as Dropbox's Magic Pocket project, in which the company is developing its own exabyte - scale infrastructure and in turn weaning off of Amazon Web Services a bit.
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