Drowning in data
Days of officially drowning in data almost upon us
Excerpt:
When tech analyst John Gantz at researcher IDC began tallying up all the digital information generated annually, he first looked in the obvious places.
He counted e-mail, spreadsheets and the other data collected by most corporate computer systems. Then there was the new digital data created by consumers. (Take digital cameras: More than 32 million are expected to be sold this year, says the Consumer Electronics Association trade group.)
But then Gantz realized that he had to look deeper. Digital photos aren't just snapped by traditional cameras — they're also taken by millions of security cameras and camera cellphones, for example.
Gantz ultimately calculated that 161 exabytes of digital data — or about 161 billion GB — were generated in 2006. And the amount is expected to rise fast.
Comment: It's boring when "old guys" talk about the "good old days", but ... back in the early 70's I sold computers that had a standard 10 MB of storage. Now I have a memory stick that is 1 GB! Wow! Those days weren't all the good, by the way!
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