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Rob BarrettI am a member of the User Systems Ergonomics Research group at the IBM Almaden Research Center. Although a physicist by training (Washington University in St. Louis and Stanford University), I have always worked with computers and enjoy designing and building systems, whether out of mechanics, electronics, or software. |

With AIM, users describe information in terms of metadata, things such as what language it is written in, what genre of writing is desired, how timely the information is, what subject area it is in. These descriptors go beyond simple word matching searches.
With RAT, as users view the results of their searches, they can mark certain results as "relevant" or "trash". RAT then provides assistance by recommending words to add or remove from the original search to produce better results.
We developed an approach based on a very narrow servo read head (which limits the error due to servo read head instabilities) which reads timing marks on the tape. These timing marks continuously vary across the tape, providing a smooth signal which indicates the position of the head. This signal is then fed back to a head positioning system to maintain accurate alignment. This was the easy part. The tough part was developing a way to write continuously varying timing marks on the tape. Tom and I designed a dual gap write head which produces the necessary pattern.
This servo technique has been incorporated into the LTO (Linear Tape-Open) standard.
More technical information is available in the proceedings of INTERMAG'96 or from our patent.
One of the most interesting applications of these scanned probes is to both manipulate and examine surfaces at (or near) the atomic scale. I developed the Charge Storage approach with my thesis advisor Cal Quate. This technique uses the scanning capacitance microscope to store information by trapping charge in the insulating films of a silicon nitride - silicon dioxide - silicon structure. The trapped charge can then be detected through its depleting effect on the underlying silicon. We have demonstrated the ability to store large numbers of bits (500,000) at a high density (26 Gb/sqin). We have also demonstrated the ability to read and write this charge at data rates of 1 Mb/sec. There are lots of open issues still, but as the superparamagnetic limit quickly approaches for magnetic data storage, this may be an option for continuing the dramatic improvements in data storage that we have seen over the past decades.
For more information, see
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NWED/B2
IBM Almaden Research Center 650 Harry Road San Jose, CA 95120 |
408-927-1911 (phone) 408-927-3030 (fax) |
barrett@almaden.ibm.com |