Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Petabyte

Encyclopedia : P : PE : PET : Petabyte


Quantities of bytes
Popular use and
(SI standard meaning)
Binary prefix standards
from IEC 60027-2
Name Symbol Quantity Name Symbol Quantity
kilobyte kB 210 (103) kibibyte KiB 210
megabyte MB 220 (106) mebibyte MiB 220
gigabyte GB 230 (109) gibibyte GiB 230
terabyte TB 240 (1012) tebibyte TiB 240
petabyte PB 250 (1015) pebibyte PiB 250
exabyte EB 260 (1018) exbibyte EiB 260
zettabyte ZB 270 (1021) zebibyte ZiB 270
yottabyte YB 280 (1024) yobibyte YiB 280

A petabyte (derived from the SI prefix peta- ) is a unit of information or computer storage equal to one quadrillion bytes. It is commonly abbreviated PB.

Because of irregularities in using the binary prefix in the definition and usage of the kilobyte, the exact number in common practice could be either one of the following:

Petabytes in use

The San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC) in the USA has a 1 petabyte hard disk store and a 6 petabyte robotic tape store, both attached to the National Science Foundation's TeraGrid network. (Source: Electronics Weekly, December 11, 2002)

The Internet Archive Wayback Machine contains almost 2 petabytes of data and is currently growing at a rate of 20 terabytes per month. (Source: [Internet Archive FAQ], as of May 2006)

The first commercially available Petabyte Storage Array was launched by the EMC Corporation in January 2006, with an approximate cost of USD 4 million. [link]

[NOB Cross media facilities] in the Netherlands employs a 1.5 petabyte storage network for the storage of all old and new public television and radio content in digital format. Within the next year, most Dutch public television content will be pulled directly out of this database during broadcast.

[Reportedly], Google in 2003 had between 2 and 5 petabytes of storage. A [more recent estimate] has that number at around 4

As of October 15 2005, all the files being shared on Kazaa totaled around 54 petabytes.

In the science-fiction TV series , the android Data was built with an ultimate storage capacity of 800 quadrillion bits, or approximately 88.8 petabytes ([Google Calculator Link]). Interestingly enough, in order to accurately remember the visual experiences alone of an approximately 40 year old human in UHDV, one would require 2.5 exabytes ([Google Calculator Link]), far greater than the 88.8 petabyte storage cited.

As of January 2006, the http://www.climateprediction.net distributed computing experiment which aims to run thousands of cycles of modelled climate change to predict future patterns is producing 2-3 petabytes of data. This project is conducted via the computing power of thousands of home users whose computers crunch numbers in their spare, 'idle' time.

According to [IBM], the Managed Storage Services offering in IBM Global Services manages more than two petabytes for IBM customers around the world.

Indiana University [announced] on April 5 2006 that it is acquiring the nation's fastest university-owned supercomputer and largest disk-based research storage facility. This new supercomputer will be connected to more than 1 petabyte of high speed disk storage. It will be by far the largest of its type of university-owned storage in the United States.

CERN has, with its newly installed LHC, a datastream with 1 petabyte/s during the collision of small parts. GridKa [link] (The European Tier1 in Karlsruhe/Germany) plans to extend its disk capacity to 4.2 petabytes for the LHC datastream.

See also

External links

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: