CDs and DVDs are the primary data storage methods for music,       software, personal computing and video. A CD can hold 783 megabytes of       data. A double-sided, double-layer DVD can hold 15.9 GB of data, which is       about eight hours of movies. These conventional storage mediums meet       today's storage needs, but storage technologies have to evolve to keep       pace with increasing consumer demand. CDs, DVDs and magnetic storage all       store bits of information on the surface of a recording medium. In order       to increase storage capabilities, scientists are now working on a new       optical storage method called holographic       memory that will go beneath the surface and use the volume of the       recording medium for storage, instead of only the surface area.       Three-dimensional data storage will be able to store more information in a       smaller space and offer faster data transfer times.        
       
                                      Holographic memory is developing technology that has promised to       revolutionalise the storage systems. It can store data upto 1 Tb in a       sugar cube sized crystal. Data from more than 1000 CDs can fit into a       holographic memory System.  Most       of the computer hard drives available today can hold only 10 to 40 GB of       data, a small fraction of what holographic memory system can hold.       Conventional memories use only the surface to store the data.        But holographic data storage systems use the volume to store data.        It has more advantages than conventional storage systems.        It is based on the principle of holography.         
       
Scientist Pieter J. van Heerden first proposed the idea of holographic (three-dimensional) storage in the early 1960s. A decade later, scientists at RCA Laboratories demonstrated the technology by recording 500 holograms in an iron-doped lithium-niobate crystal and 550 holograms of high-resolution images in a light-sensitive polymer material. The lack of cheap parts and the advancement of magnetic and semiconductor memories placed the development of holographic data storage on hold