Esther Schindler (Slashdot reader #16,185) shared this story from Hewlett Packard’s Enterprise blog:
Storage is a staple of both science and science fiction, and forms the basis, or a crucial component, of many a piece of speculative fiction… [H]ere are eight past visions of the storage future that either passed their error checks or succumbed to bit rot. Why store vast quantities of data on a device when you can just slap it into someone’s head?
The article acknowledges that in many science fiction stories, data is simply preserved using such primitive technologies as “the written word” and “brute-force [human] memory,” as well as ordinary real-world storage technologies like the server room in Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, or basic non-cloud-based computers. But there’s also wetware — think “Johnny Mnemonic “– and the data crystals in Babylon Five.
The article even acknowledges that time Batman beat Mr. Freeze by carving binary code into a wall, giving future generations the recipe for antifreeze.

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Source:: Slashdot