Eugen Pavel is a Romanian scientist and the claimed inventor of the Hyper CD-ROM.
Pavel graduated with a physics degree from the University of Bucharest in 1976.[1] He was awarded the Romanian Academy Prize in 1991 and obtained his doctorate in Physics from the Romanian Institute of Atomic Physics in 1992.[2]
He won the "Prix International de l’Organisation Mondiale de la Presse Periodique" and a gold medal at the November 1999 EUREKA Contest in Brussels for inventions that led to the creation of the Hyper CD-ROM. Dr. Pavel has published more than 40 books and articles, and he is the holder of 62 patents and patent applications.[1]
Hyper CD-ROM
The Hyper CD-ROM is a proposed 3D optical data storage medium which uses Fluorescent Multilayer Disc[3] technology with a reported capacity of 1PB and a theoretical capacity of 100 EB[4] on a single disc. Despite its bold claims the technology has not been shown as a working prototype in the over twenty years since its announcement.
The Hyper CD-ROM technology is patented in 21 countries: the USA, Canada, Japan, Israel and 17 European states.[1]
In an interview about his work on the Hyper CD-ROM, Dr. Pavel stated that "the research for this project is 100% personal, [and] so is the support for experiments."[5]
References
- 1 2 3 "Hyper CD-ROM: Three Dimensional Optical Memory with Fluorescent Photosensitive Glass". Archived from the original on 2006-07-21. Retrieved 2006-06-30.
- ↑ The Center of Excellence for Advanced Technologies "Euro-Asia" The Gutenberg era sets - the Pavel era begins.
- ↑ PC World, 12 October 2000 Archived 5 December 2006 at the Wayback Machine Hyper CD-ROM Packs Terabytes
- ↑ The Register, 19 January 2012 Holographic storage's corpse twitches
- ↑ "cdfreaks.com's translation of a Romanian article on the Hyper CD-ROM". Archived from the original on 2007-05-23. Retrieved 2006-12-08.