Friday, 31 July 2009

Apple’s 2TB Time Capsule Arrives To Back Up Even More Memories

Apple Time Capsule 2TB [Box, Time Machine, Front & Back Mashup]

Apple quietly updated their Time Capsule lineup yesterday adding a newer, more capacious 2TB version whilst removing the smaller 500GB model.

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Friday, 8 May 2009

Clickfree Traveler: Credit Card-Sized External SSD

Clickfree Traveler: Credit Card-Sized External SSD

Following on from their Transformer backup device we saw back in January, Clickfree have introduced a diminutive, slimline solid state drive called the Traveler – that is as small as a credit card.

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Wednesday, 4 February 2009

Seagate Unveils 2TB Constellation ES 3.5-inch HDDs

Not to be outdone by WD’s 2TB breakthrough last week, Seagate have announced their own 2TB monster in the form of the 3.5-inch Constellation ES. The disk runs at 7200RPM, which gives it an edge over its 5400RPM rival, as well as an SAS 2.0 interface for blazing transfer speeds of up to 6Gbps.

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Tuesday, 27 January 2009

Western Digital 2TB Caviar Green Launches, Sets Industry First.

After an earlier leak by an Australian distributor, Western Digital have officially announced their breakthrough 2TB Caviar Green SATA HDD, which marks an industry first as the highest capacity single disk hard drive. The drive tops Seagate’s 1.5TB Barracuda announced back in July and uses the same four platter design, only manages to squeeze a massive 500GB into each one.

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Thursday, 18 December 2008

Toshiba 512GB 2.5-inch SSDs Mark A World First

Toshiba have today announced a new line of flash-based 2.5-inch notebook SSDs that mark an industry first with a top storage capacity of 512GB. The drives are based on 43 nanometer Multi-Level Cell NAND and will be displayed at the upcoming CES 2009 in January.

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Thursday, 25 September 2008

Toshiba Announces World’s First 250GB 1.8-Inch Hard Disk

Toshiba today announced a new world first for 1.8-inch drives with their MK2529GSG model which holds an impressive 250GB. The 5,400rpm drive uses a SATA interface with a 3Gbps data transfer rate, has a seek time of just 15ms and is a mere 8mm (0.31-inch) thin, making it ideal for ultra-portable laptops and portable media players.

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Monday, 15 September 2008

Western Digital Releases 500GB Portable USB Drives

Western Digital has today announced their latest portable hard drive solution in the form of the elegant ‘My Passport Elite’ range with capacities of up to 500GB. The drives run on USB bus power, weigh less than 7 ounces and sport a capacity gauge that informs you, at-a-glance, of all remaining storage space.

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Wednesday, 11 June 2008

Toshiba MK1617GSG – 1.8″ 160GB Disk Is A World First

Toshiba has just announced their new dual-platter 160GB 1.8-inch SATA disk which spins at 5400RPM – a world first.


The interface speed has been increased to 1.5Gbps, internal maximum data transfer rate is up 17% and power consumption shows a 25% improvement over Toshiba’s current 120GB model. The drive is also lighter at only 60g.


The growth in sub-notebook demand has increased competition in 1.8-inch HDDs with consumers expecting the same level of storage and performance as bigger notebooks or even desktops.

The drive is still too big, however, to fit in ultra-thin laptops like Apple’s MacBook Air or Voodoo’s Envy 133.

The drive will enter production in August.

Source:
BusinessWeek

Monday, 26 May 2008

Samsung Creates 256GB Solid State Drive

Samsung has announced at their fifth annual Samsung Mobile Solution Forum in Taipei, the development of one of the thinnest, highest speed and largest capacity solid state drives to date with 250GB of storage.

Most PCs and laptops today, including the new MacBook Air, have only 64GB Solid State Drives.

The 2.5-inch drive is based on NAND Flash memory and has a sequential read speed of 200 megabytes per second (MB/s). It also has a fast sequential write speed of 160MB/s leaving Samsung claiming some of the fastest transfer rates for SSD data – 2.4 times faster than ‘a typical HDD’. Despite this performance increase, the drive still only consumes 0.9 Watts in active mode.


The drive is only 9.5mm think, making it the world’s thinnest SSD. A 25% improvement over the former leader.

Intel is also planning to announce high-capacity SSDs later this year which would provide some serious competition for Samsung. It has also been reported that Google has been testing Intel’s SSD technology for possible use in their expansive data centres.

Both companies will utilise multi-level cell (MLC) technology combined with a high-speed Serial ATA (SATA) II interface.

“With development of the 256GB SSD, the notebook PC is on the brink of a second stage of evolution. This change is comparable to the evolution from the Sony Walkman to NAND memory-based MP3 players, representing an initial step in the shift to thinner, smaller SSD-based notebooks with significantly improved performance and more than ample storage,” said Jim Elliott, Samsung Semiconductor’s vice president of memory marketing.

Samsung is expected to begin production of the SSD by the end of the year. A 1.8-inch version of the drive is also expected to be available by then.

Photo credit: Gizmodo


Monday, 12 May 2008

Google trying out solid-state disks



Google is using Intel SSD technology in servers at the company’s headquarters according to a report in DigiTimes.


SSD or solid-state disks, use flash memory much like a flash drive/dongle you attach to the USB port on your personal computer. SSD technology has many advantages including large reductions in energy consumption and large increases in performance. The down side, even with portable drives, is their lack of capacity.

Although capacity has increased dramatically in recent years and looks set to continue, they are still a long way from that of traditional hard disk drives which use spinning magnetic platters to store data.

Google runs thousands of servers and could greatly benefit from the technology. They are currently testing the techology, but what is unclear is whether Google is planning some large-scale deployment.


Source:
DigiTimes