_               _            _
                          (_)             | |          | |
  __ _ _ __ ___   __ _ _____ _ __   __ _  | |_ _____  _| |_
 / _` | '_ ` _ \ / _` |_  / | '_ \ / _` | | __/ _ \ \/ / __|
| (_| | | | | | | (_| |/ /| | | | | (_| | | ||  __/>  <| |_
 \__,_|_| |_| |_|\__,_/___|_|_| |_|\__, |  \__\___/_/\_\\__|
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      nothing to see here.         |___/  please move along.
* Basic annual subscription rate is $34.97. Your subscription is for 12 monthly issues plus two bonus issues. Canada/Mexico residents please add $18/year for surface delivery. all other countries please add $44/year for air mail delivery. Canadian GST included. The most recent study has revealed that every year since then the amount of information generated has grown about 30%. But these percentages belie the vast mountains of information involved. Most new information is captured on computer hard disks Study authors Prof Peter Lyman and colleagues found that in 2002 alone about five exabytes of new information was generated by the worlds print, film, magnetic and optical storage systems. By comparison the US Library of Congress print collection, comprising 19 million books and 56 million manuscripts, equates to about 10 terabytes of information. It would take 500,000 Libraries of Congress to equal five exabytes. But even this figure is dwarfed by the gargantuan amount of information flowing through electronic channels such as the telephone, radio, television and internet.