With such high density of ultra-concentrated data per inch, i think the biggest concern would be the resistance of the disc surface against scratches, grease, dust, etc. Any microscopic speck could render the disc unreadable partly or completely. Maybe encase it for protection, like the UMD disc?
I'm not very worried about the price... the bluray is already quite affordable nowadays and it didn't take very long for the prices to fall. The disc will obviously retail at a higher price than other lesser-capacity media, but as cheaper materials are found, and various brands get to work on it, developing cheaper manufacturing technologies, i think the prices will fall fast enough.
The main concern is the durability of these discs and how long they can retain the information without going "bad" with time.
I'm not very worried about the price... the bluray is already quite affordable nowadays and it didn't take very long for the prices to fall. The disc will obviously retail at a higher price than other lesser-capacity media, but as cheaper materials are found, and various brands get to work on it, developing cheaper manufacturing technologies, i think the prices will fall fast enough.
The main concern is the durability of these discs and how long they can retain the information without going "bad" with time.
Interesting, but it will probably never be released to the public, like many other research that got similar results as this one.












