The Holographic Versatile Card (HVC) was a proposed data storage format by Optware; the projected date for a Japanese launch had been the first half of 2007, pending finalization of the specification, however as of December 2024, nothing has yet surfaced.This issue may be related to the bankrupt of certain entities once responsible for the development and investigation for both HVD & HVC back in 2010(see HVD page). One of its main advantages compared with Holographic_Versatile_Disc and other sorts of disks was supposed to be the lack of moving parts when played. They claimed it would hold about 30~150GB of data, with a write speed 3 times faster than Blu-ray, and be approximately the size of a credit card. Optware once claimed that at release the media would cost about ¥100 (roughly $1.20 at that time) each, that reader devices would initially cost about ¥200,000(roughly $2400) while reader/writer devices would have cost ¥1 000,000 (roughly $12000, as per exchange rate of Apr 2011) each.[1]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Nezu, Tadashi (June 8, 2005). "Story at NikkeiBP". Nikkei Business Productions.
External links
edit- Optware Company that introduced HVC format to the public.
- Engadget Old news report on the Holographic Versatile Card
- Über Gizmo News report on the Holographic Versatile Card
- An Image of HVC with its own Reading Device.
- コリニア方式ホログラフィーの原理と応用展開 aka Collinear Holography/Principle and Applications The Original Japanese Essay that Mentioned the HVC Concept after introducing the Holographic_Versatile_Disc(HVD)