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Data Storage Announcements Technology

Hitachi Announces 400GB Hard Drive 476

jkcity writes "Hitachi Global Storage Technologies has announced their new 400GB 3.5-inch ATA hard drive, which they claim makes them the new capacity king. Specs on the drive are also available."
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Hitachi Announces 400GB Hard Drive

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  • deskstar (Score:5, Funny)

    by AnimeEd ( 670271 ) on Friday March 12, 2004 @04:27AM (#8541296)
    that's a big deathstar
    • Yeah, they shouldn't be too proud of that technological terror they've constructed.
    • Re:deskstar (Score:5, Insightful)

      by phrasebook ( 740834 ) on Friday March 12, 2004 @05:00AM (#8541488)
      Oh boo hoo. I got hit by a bad IBM drive (75GXP) 'deathstar' but I don't think I'd mind getting a new Hitatchi, even if it is still an IBM design. Got a 'travelstar' in my laptop that's been going fine for ages. So there was a bad lot a while back, get over it.
      • I'll get over it when the three IBM tech drives I just ran an RMA on get back and work for an extended period of time without flushing terrabyte fractions of my data down the crapper!
      • Re:deskstar (Score:4, Funny)

        by NanoGator ( 522640 ) on Friday March 12, 2004 @06:49AM (#8541912) Homepage Journal
        "Oh boo hoo. I got hit by a bad IBM drive (75GXP) 'deathstar' but I don't think I'd mind getting a new Hitatchi, even if it is still an IBM design. Got a 'travelstar' in my laptop that's been going fine for ages. So there was a bad lot a while back, get over it. "

        Just got a phone call from phrasebook. His travelstar blew up. Murphy's Law and all.
    • Re:deskstar (Score:5, Informative)

      by eclectro ( 227083 ) on Friday March 12, 2004 @05:02AM (#8541502)

      Because of the "deathstar problem" they are outsourcing inspection and final testing of the drives to a different company [whiteflyer.com] now.

      • Re:deskstar (Score:5, Funny)

        by Lord Prox ( 521892 ) on Friday March 12, 2004 @05:32AM (#8541614) Homepage
        Because of the "deathstar problem" they are outsourcing inspection and final testing of the drives to a different company now.
        I found that with my IBM drives if I keep the temp down (fan/vent/air flow/whatever) they were a lot more stable.

        As for the capacity of this thing, think of it in other terms... 27.75 days of Spice Channel in VCD format.

        I hereby propose a new measurement standard...
        We have Volkswagens for mass
        foolball fields for distance
        and VCD Days for storage.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 12, 2004 @05:49AM (#8541655)
      ..after the spectacular failure of the smaller IBM Deathstar, the new 400GB Hitachi Imperial Deathstar will be protected against failure by a forcefield projected around it from the nearby motherboard that it orbits.
  • Good for RAIDs (Score:5, Insightful)

    by farnz ( 625056 ) <slashdot@farnz. o r g . uk> on Friday March 12, 2004 @04:29AM (#8541303) Homepage Journal
    It looks like a nice drive for putting in a big RAID, but I'm not sure I'd like to put that much data in one place; the MTBF is about right for a modern drive, and I've had the 2 of my last 8 drives fail.
    • Re:Good for RAIDs (Score:3, Interesting)

      by DigitumDei ( 578031 )
      Personally I like to keep all my favourite DVD's on hdd. Easy access, the DVD itself can stay safe and sound in its cover. 400GB is going to fit easily over 50 uncompressed DVD's, and I doubt I'll ever have 50 movies that I watch often enough that I benifit from copying them to hdd.

      Of course I own all the DVD's so if the drive breaks its merely a pain to copy them back on. However, for the majority of users, 400GB of kazza'ed movies and music is a lot of time and bandwidth wasted. :P

      People who do lots
      • 400GB will store over 33 hours of DV quality footage. This is a good thing. Time spent on managing and planning disk space is time not spent on editing or various time wasters.

        However on hte low end, my home, this won't happen for awhile. What I want to know is when and if these drives will force the price of 200GB drives down? I mroe space, dangit! Truly high end systems won't touch this drive, but a lot of work gets done on less than first line equipment. This could be useful in a few years to uss low cl
    • It looks like a nice drive for putting in a big RAID

      AFAIK the acronym RAID stands for Redundant Array of Inexpensive Disks. And I guess at the moment such a drive is not what I would call "inexpensive". YMMV.

      • Re:Good for RAIDs (Score:5, Insightful)

        by cdrudge ( 68377 ) on Friday March 12, 2004 @08:30AM (#8542383) Homepage
        You are correct that it may not be inexpensive compaired to that 80 GB drive you bought last week at OfficeDepot for 19.99 A/R, it's still cheaper to put a couple these in an array and have 2TB then to go out and find a single 2TB drive. Inexpensive is a relative term to what you are compairing it to.
    • Re:Good for RAIDs (Score:5, Informative)

      by fake_name ( 245088 ) on Friday March 12, 2004 @04:43AM (#8541394)
      The "I" in RAID stands for "inexpensive". Part of the idea behind RAID is you can create a 400GB "drive" using 4 100 GB drives, which should work out cheaper. (ignoring the cost of the RAID controller...)
      • The "I" in RAID stands for "inexpensive".

        Umm, no, it doesn't. It stands for "Independent".

        You will find some people who think it's "inexpensive" but that's just rubbish...
        • Re:Good for RAIDs (Score:5, Informative)

          by divide overflow ( 599608 ) on Friday March 12, 2004 @05:36AM (#8541623)
          >>The "I" in RAID stands for "inexpensive".

          >Umm, no, it doesn't. It stands for "Independent".


          I believe you are BOTH right. As I recall, the "I" in RAID *originally* stood for "inexpensive" back in the days when the rapidly dropping price of 5.25" and 3.5" drives were making them very attractive "inexpensive" replacements for larger, *very* expensive mass storage systems. But time passed and the success of RAID arrays made them the primary method for providing high performance data storage and retrival as well as data redundancy. They became the new standard for comparison, so the term "inexpensive" was no longer relevant and was replaced with the word "independent," a term that better describes them. As I was typing this I found this link that seems to agree with my recollection [ic.ac.uk].
          • Re:Good for RAIDs (Score:5, Insightful)

            by NNKK ( 218503 ) on Friday March 12, 2004 @06:59AM (#8541962) Homepage
            No, "Independant" is just plain wrong, as is FOLDOC, and I'm sick of having to point it out just because some people can't stand to be corrected.

            First of all, "Inexpensive" still applies and then some. It's much, much cheaper to assemble an array of disks adding up to more than a few hundred GB than to try building a single drive.

            Secondly, there is nothing "independant" about the disks in a RAID. The closest you come is in straight mirroring configurations (which are highly unusual for an array of any significant size), and they still don't operate independantly.
      • Re:Good for RAIDs (Score:3, Informative)

        by colinleroy ( 592025 )
        What you describe is RAID 0 (stripping), if i'm not mistaken. You have different levels of RAID, and the kind you describe does not provide data security; you have to mirror to protect your data from the failure of a drive. With 4x100GB, you could do RAID 0+1, for example, that is stripping+mirroring (2x100GB x2, you'll have 200GB space available and data security).
        See http://www.acnc.com/04_01_00.html
        • Re:Good for RAIDs (Score:4, Informative)

          by divide overflow ( 599608 ) on Friday March 12, 2004 @05:47AM (#8541650)
          >With 4x100GB, you could do RAID 0+1, for example, that is stripping+mirroring (2x100GB x2, you'll have 200GB space available and data security).

          OR you could do RAID 5, have striping and rotating parity, have 300GB of available space and be protected against a single drive failure. Of course, always match your RAID configuration to your specific data requirements, as each RAID configuration offers different trade-offs between usable storage space, read/write performance, data security and cost. YMMV.
      • Re:Good for RAIDs (Score:2, Informative)

        by troon ( 724114 )
        If you create a 400GB array using 4x100GB drives, you end up with one-quarter the reliability of a single 100GB drive. This is RAID-0, which doesn't really fulfill the "R" bit of RAID.

        You need something like 3x200GB drives to make a RAID-4 or RAID-5 array of 400GB, which can withstand a single drive failure.
      • by KingJoshi ( 615691 ) <slashdot@joshi.tk> on Friday March 12, 2004 @05:36AM (#8541621) Homepage
        which should work out cheaper. (ignoring the cost of the RAID controller...)

        I probably shouldn't reply again to the same post, but how can you talk about the cost of something for comparison and leave out a main component? "This is cheaper if you don't include taxes and shipping and other hidden costs." That's just ridiculous.

        Reminds me of my mom asking me to drive her to a store an hour away so she can save 39 cents on some groceries. Yeah, it's cheaper if you don't include the costs for gas and my time!

        sorry about the rant, but mothers can be so stubborn...

        PS: no I don't live in the basement. I live on a college campus. I do return to live my parents this summer though. And I'm unemployed. And I don't have a girlfriend. Oh damn, I'm a typical Slashdotter :(

  • by nacturation ( 646836 ) <nacturation@gmai l . c om> on Friday March 12, 2004 @04:29AM (#8541304) Journal
    Here's the secret scoop on how they did it [slashdot.org].
  • by derphilipp ( 745164 ) on Friday March 12, 2004 @04:29AM (#8541305) Homepage
    Finally enough place for my linux every-distribution iso collection...
  • Yes, yes, it's 400GB... but how big is it in units that *I* can understand, pachyderms and volkswagons?
    • by eclectro ( 227083 ) on Friday March 12, 2004 @05:23AM (#8541594)

      Well, if every clown represented one GB, it would roughly take one hour for all the clowns to get out of the volkswagon (9 sec per clown).
    • Re:How big is it? (Score:3, Informative)

      by KingJoshi ( 615691 )
      Yes, yes, it's 400GB... but how big is it in units that *I* can understand, pachyderms and volkswagons?

      If you read the article, you'd notice it says: 45 hours of HDTV broadcast

      In case you still don't get it, that's 45 hours of HIGH QUALITY PORN. I mean, that's almost as good as the real thing, right?

      • The general units in cases such as this, young padawan, is Libraries of Congress. Now, run back to the article, and re-calculate how many Libraries of Congress equates 45 hours of HDTV broadcast.
  • very nice (Score:3, Funny)

    by Maegashira ( 738950 ) on Friday March 12, 2004 @04:30AM (#8541315)
    this is the first media where i can store my full archive of low quality pr0n! i am happy now.
  • Trickle down (Score:4, Insightful)

    by slycer9 ( 264565 ) on Friday March 12, 2004 @04:31AM (#8541322) Journal
    I'm just anxious for more and more of this technology to trickle down to laptops.

    Yah, I know, it's a different environment. But have you noticed how more and more people aren't even using their desktops anymore?

    We've got SATA for desktops. Still stuck with really old tech for laptops. MASSIVE disk sizes for desktops, relatively small for laptops.

    C'mon. If we can get 2GB CF working properly, where in the hell is my 200GB laptop HD??

    Seriously, HD capacity is the ONLY reason I fire my desktop up at ALL these days.

    Well...'till HL2 ships of course...but that's another rant entirely.
    • Sounds like you're just the person for this new Acer laptop [slashdot.org]...
    • Re:Trickle down (Score:4, Insightful)

      by jez9999 ( 618189 ) on Friday March 12, 2004 @05:39AM (#8541633) Homepage Journal
      Hum. What do you use your laptop for, exactly?

      Personally I couldn't stand using a laptop all the time. I find a desktop is better ergonomically (hate laptop keyboards, nasty LCD monitors, nasty tinny speakers) and financially (all that miniturization isn't free). Yeah I know you can plug larger peripherals into a laptop to alleviate some of these problems but you're getting closer and closer to turning it into a desktop then.
      • by blorg ( 726186 ) on Friday March 12, 2004 @07:07AM (#8541990)
        Hum. What do you use your laptop for, exactly? Personally I couldn't stand using a laptop all the time. I find a desktop is better ergonomically...

        'I don't know why anyone uses a laptop' appears to be a very common opinion on Slashdot. So, as a laptop user for over seven years, let me fill you in with why I prefer a laptop:

        I much prefer the digitally-connected LCD monitor, which is a lot sharper and less tiring than any CRT I've used. I have an external monitor also (LCD, naturally) and find the added desktop space invaluable for serious work. Cleartype on a digital LCD is very nice, too. I know you can do all this on a desktop now, but laptops had digitally-connected LCDs and second monitor ports long before DVI and dual-head graphics cards were a common option. I love the fact that I can carry it around and from room to room easily, and still be internet-connected through WiFi. I love that my stuff and environment is always there whether at work, home, or away on business. I love that it is completely silent - this was in fact why I started with a laptop in the first place; I simply could not stand desktop noise when researching/writing. I like being able to put it away in a drawer when I'm not using it.

        The laptop percentage of the market relative to desktops has been steadily increasing over the last few years, so it appears that many people agree with me. I personally could never use a desktop as my primary machine, although I recognise that people have different priorities and that for many a desktop is a better choice (cost & power being the key issues.) I did recently get a Shuttle home server solely for storage (670gb) and PVR purposes. Apart from the TV connection for watching programmes, it is accessed through terminal services over WiFi - from my laptop.

    • Re:Trickle down (Score:3, Informative)

      In case you haven't noticed the drives on your laptop are typically 2.5in wide and much much thinner than desktop drives. Why is this important? Well the limiting factor in HD size is the aureal density of the platter (bits / area). This is currently limited to around 60 billion bits / sq in. So if you want smaller drives to fit in your small laptop then you'll have to live with lower capacities. The platters being used in both 3.5 in desktop drives and 2.5in laptop drives have the *same* aureal density s
  • What for? (Score:2, Insightful)

    What guys are you doing with so huge hard drivers? My first HD had 40MB, I know it was small number... it was less than 40 diskiettes. Today I have 120GB, and I am never out of space. 120GB is more than 120CDs. On one CD I can put whole movie or half of movie, few mp3 albums, or lots, lots of text/sources. I just have no idea what I could put on bigger drive, except movies I don't watch, music I don't listen and software I don't use.
    • by Anonymous Coward
      "What guys are you doing with so huge hard drivers?"

      Plan on running Longhorn.
    • Re:What for? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by NanoGator ( 522640 ) on Friday March 12, 2004 @07:02AM (#8541973) Homepage Journal
      "What guys are you doing with so huge hard drivers? My first HD had 40MB, I know it was small number... it was less than 40 diskiettes. Today I have 120GB, and I am never out of space. 120GB is more than 120CDs. On one CD I can put whole movie or half of movie, few mp3 albums, or lots, lots of text/sources. I just have no idea what I could put on bigger drive, except movies I don't watch, music I don't listen and software I don't use. "

      Well I imagine I'm in the minority here, but I'm a 3D artist rendering animations on my machine. My 120 gig drive's starting to get full of lightly compressed (.png) images and mesh files etc. I can work within the 120 gig by doing backups etc, but a 400gb drive is definitely tempting.

      So what about average Joes? DV video anybody? $500 buys you a DV camcorder. Just plug it into your firewire port and you've got 13 gigs an hour chugging along into it. Somebody who takes lots of vids of their kids would want lots and lots of gigs so they don't have to recompress. Etc.

      I should point out, though, that there is a huge difference between needing the storage and being able to use it.
    • Re:What for? (Score:3, Informative)

      by mihalis ( 28146 )

      What guys are you doing with so huge hard drivers?

      Me? Two words : digital video.

      The mini-dv cartridges I use hold 1 hour of high quality footage and only cost $10 or so. That is unfortunately 13GB when imported into my laptop. When I finish a project, I dump to an external Maxtor 250GB drive I bought six months ago for about $300.

      These capacities make home movies more affordable than ever, it's great.

  • glass platters (Score:2, Interesting)

    by magical22 ( 664542 )
    from what I heard hitachi/ibm fixed there death stars by getting rid of the glass platters. I had two of these fail and have had one replaced with the newer style that is ok, and a older on which, is making dieing noises every once and awhile... would be nice to buy 12 of these, setup a raid 5 to give you a nice 4GB! with one hot swap spare.. nice!
  • by Killjoy_NL ( 719667 ) <slashdotNO@SPAMremco.palli.nl> on Friday March 12, 2004 @04:34AM (#8541333)
    Really, it doesn't matter that much anymore.
    What they really should be concentrating on is reliability.

    I mean, the Hitachi HDD division(sp?) is the old IBM HDD division. And they haven't that good of a track record (even though I owned a few IBM's and had 0 problems)
  • ATA-100 only ? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Choron ( 88276 ) on Friday March 12, 2004 @04:36AM (#8541345)
    The specs says it's an ATA-100, I'm far from being a hardware expert but that looks weird to me, isn't a supposedely top-notch drive supposed to support ATA-133 ?
    • Re:ATA-100 only ? (Score:5, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 12, 2004 @04:40AM (#8541370)
      No, ata 133 is a scam.
      A standard 7200 RPM drive generally maxes at a little over 66MB/s (ATA100s just barly needed) (and cause its parallel, it can't share bandwidth).
      Note that WD and seagate don't use it.
      The hype about SATA is not 150MB/s, but that its serial and doesn't ahve any master/slave nonsense
    • Re:ATA-100 only ? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by pantherace ( 165052 ) on Friday March 12, 2004 @04:43AM (#8541398)
      You do realize that ATA-133 has essentially 0 advantage over ATA-100 don't you. A 7200 rpm drive might make 40-45 MB/sec tops, and doubling that for a 15k rpm (though the highest I have seen for IDE or SATA is 10k) still less than the 100MB provided by ATA-100 & honestly is anyone going to be using a 15k new drive and not be using scsi or sata?

      According to the specs it is a 7200rpm which will not benefit from ATA-133 over ATA-100

      • Re:ATA-100 only ? (Score:3, Insightful)

        by pe1chl ( 90186 )
        But of course you will put two of these on each controller, so you need more than 100MB.

        The low-end server that arrived at work yesterday has two 10kRPM drives that each read 66 MB/s sustained. Datarates are improving all the time.
      • But it *can* transfer from the buffer at that speed, so if the buffer is reasonably large (say 8MB) then ATA-133 should really be faster in some circumstances.
        • Re:ATA-100 only ? (Score:3, Informative)

          by Vellmont ( 569020 )
          Ok, let's do the numbers. A big 8 meg cache will take 8/100, or .08 seconds with ATA-100. It will take 8/133 or about .06 seconds with ATA-133. That's a difference of a whopping .02 seconds. After that huge savings of .02 seconds you're back to the disk bottleneck of 45 MB/sec.

          Yah, ATA-100 is just so much faster than ATA-133. In fact if you're only using one drive you can get away with only ATA-66 and interface still isn't a bottleneck. A big on-drive cache is to maximize the throughput of the drive
  • by frs_rbl ( 615298 ) on Friday March 12, 2004 @04:36AM (#8541349) Journal
    At these sizes, a HD is becoming the only way of backing up another HD
    • by Endareth ( 684446 ) on Friday March 12, 2004 @04:42AM (#8541393) Journal
      This is very true... Just been through the backup/reinstall process on my home pc, and had to backup my 120 GB drive. Considered borrowing a 40 GB DLT tape drive from a friend, but the time and cost of tapes was too steep. Ended up storing it all on smaller drives and across the network. Took way too long either way. Next time I do this I'm just going to buy another HDD of equal size...
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 12, 2004 @04:36AM (#8541350)
    Excellent...(insert wiggling of fingers here)... now when the feds come knocking on my door, I only have to demagnitise one drive instead of 2... Time well spent...
    I do imagine that this is more for the server market or for, as they put it, applications where tape back up would be used... I can't think of any reason to have that much information in one place, until the next version of windows comes out and youneed two of these things.
  • Pre Installed data? (Score:2, Interesting)

    by MrIrwin ( 761231 )
    Interesting to see in the specs the capacity in terms of media content, 40,000 books...10,000 mp3's etc. That is a lot of space to fill when you get your new drive. How nice if they were supplied with a preloaded partition (100 gigs say) that contained a lot of goodies. Better still, pre-load with several partions, for example: a) Free windows software and documents b) Free Linux software and documents c) Platform independent documentation and referenc d) Non computer related stuff (Guthenburg project,fo
  • 5 platters (Score:5, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 12, 2004 @04:41AM (#8541385)
    There are 5 80gb platters in this harddisk. They're just putting more of what makes a normal harddisk into it. I don't think that's a good idea: The result is probably heavier and more mechanically fragile than most harddisks. In my experience, disks with more platters fail sooner than disks with only one or two platters.
    • Of course they do. A disk with 4 platters is like 4 disks with 1 platter in RAID-0 (striped) configuration.

      When there is a fixed failure chance per platter, one can expect the device failure rate to go up with the number of platters.
    • Re:5 platters (Score:5, Interesting)

      by MarcQuadra ( 129430 ) * on Friday March 12, 2004 @07:11AM (#8542011)
      True. That's my 'trick' to reliability. I usually purchase the lowest-model of the newest family of drives. I recently had to replace a laptop drive, so I hit the spec sheets and found the Hitachi Travelstar 5k80, a 5400RPM 80GB drive, but the 80GB model has 2 platters, they have a 40GB model with one. It works like a dream, and I have half the number of heads to crash.

      Another trick I use is to buy from a manufacturer that had problems the year BEFORE. I'm buying IBM/Hitachi exclusively, because the bad PR from years ago is still pushing their QA to high levels. The Deskstar 180GXP is an awesome drive, I've installed over ten of them for people and not one failure yet.
  • by Channard ( 693317 ) on Friday March 12, 2004 @04:43AM (#8541395) Journal
    .. why the rumours are MS aren't going to put an HD in X-Box 2 - we now have an HD that can hold the entire X-Box 1 game catalogue.
  • Fabulous! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by pla ( 258480 ) on Friday March 12, 2004 @04:43AM (#8541397) Journal
    This aught to push the 320GB drives into the sub-$200 category within a few weeks. About time, too, the prices have lingered between $250 and $300 for months now.

    Nothing like a bigger-better-faster-harder product to make the rest nice and cheap. ;-)
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 12, 2004 @04:45AM (#8541409)
    "The Deskstar 7K400 provides enough capacity to store the following:

    400 hours of standard TV programming
    45 hours of HDTV programming
    More than 6,500 hours of high quality digital music" ....

    "or, after you install Windows and Office XP...:
    13 minutes of standard TV programming
    4 minutes of HDTV programming
    More than 6,500 seconds of high quality digital music"
    • 400 hours of standard TV programming 45 hours of HDTV programming More than 6,500 hours of high quality digital music

      .. sixty seasons of Red Vs Blue.

  • Old (Score:5, Funny)

    by muffen ( 321442 ) on Friday March 12, 2004 @04:48AM (#8541417)
    Well, if you buy one of these, dont forget to double the space [slashdot.org] and increase the speed! [datadocktorn.nu]
  • by lingqi ( 577227 ) on Friday March 12, 2004 @04:50AM (#8541437) Journal
    I thought that the news about this drive was that it's 7200rpm - the former "biggest" was maxtor at 5400rpm only. (IIRC)

    (i say only, because I hope nobody is using those terrible 4200rpm bigfoot drives these days)
  • Specs out of whack (Score:5, Insightful)

    by adrian_hon ( 145751 ) <adrian@@@vavatch...co...uk> on Friday March 12, 2004 @04:51AM (#8541443) Homepage
    The person writing the specs is either incompetent or insane. For 400GB of storage, they quote:

    "45 hours of HDTV broadcast, or
    4,000 high-resolution x-rays, or
    40,000 typical library books, or
    10,000 high-quality, 4 minute MP3 recordings"

    Wow... I never knew that a typical library book took up 10MB (more like 100k). What are they doing, scanning all the pages in? And what kind of bitrate are they using for a 4 minute MP3 recording to take up 40MB?
  • Who cares what manufacturer can deliver the largest disk. In a month the rest will follow. That does not give them the label" capacity king" in my book. On the other hand, what Hitachi has done for the microdrive after they acquired it from IBM should give them a few points. After they got in control, microdrives has increased in capacity and decreased in price. Now all they need is durability, and microdrives are set to conquer the laptop market.
  • Six of these can probably hold the entire iTunes music store collection.
  • by 91degrees ( 207121 ) on Friday March 12, 2004 @05:12AM (#8541553) Journal
    My first hard drive was 270 Megs. When it was new, I thought I'd never fill it up. When I inevitably did fill it, I upgraded to a "huge" 3GB drive. I figured that would be more than enough to last me for a while. It was. Then I discovered mp3s. Right now, I've got a total of about 50GB of space, and spend half my time working out what data I no longer need in order to make space for what I'm doing.

    Noe, 400GB seems vast. More than enough to be going on with, but I know this would fill up as well. So will the 4TB drive I'll eventually have. I wonder if we'll ever have "enough" space. I also wonder what I'll actually fill all this space with.
    • by technix4beos ( 471838 ) <cshaiku@gmail.com> on Friday March 12, 2004 @06:42AM (#8541874) Homepage Journal
      I know exactly what you mean.

      I'm not that old (only 31), but I've been using computers since 1982, and on a serious, regular basis since 1990. Along the way I've noticed the "price factor" has always remained relatively the same, in regards to hard drives, and total system breakpoint sales prices.

      Back in 1988 I was lucky to play with a laptop that had a whopping 20megs in it, and 4mb of ram. I thought I was in heaven. Then I got my own computer a few years later that had a 500mb drive.

      I never thought I could fill that much space, considering that at the time the largest filesize I was playing with were zipfiles downloaded via bbs latenite that were half a meg or so. I remember one nite downloading a new version of Remote BBS, and knowing it would take only 45 minutes on dialup (2400 baud modem, fast! :) I went to the store, went for a walk, etc.

      And I thought that was FAST. Did I mention speedy? 1K every 4 seconds... Couldn't believe it.

      What does this have to do with hard drive spaces? Well... I'll get to that.

      A few years pass. I'm finally playing with a pentium and upgrade to a whopping 3 gigs! This was -just- before the time when mp3 was hitting the scene on this "new" web thing... I wish I knew how powerful the concepts were then, as I know now, but I digress... hindsight is perfect, and all that.

      So, before napster came out, it was the thing to search personal webpages for mp3, and whoa! download them straight from the website...

      There wasn't any real traffic issues in the day. Everyone was using fast 14.4k or if you were lucky bleeding-edge 28.8k modems, but the webservers were on T1's, and could easily handle the hundred thousand or so people actively getting mp3. It was a strange time. Exhilirating and always full of "what should we look for today" events while combing this new territory.

      The growth of the internet and the growth of hard disk capacity have been in lockstep since the early nineties, I'd dare say that they each are compelling the other, but that's a story for another time.

      So Napster hits the scene. People go apeshit and download/upload like crazy. Time to upgrade that hard drive to a whopping 8 GIGS! Get two of em'. And I still didn't think I would ever fill that much space inside of a year. Oh, how naive we are... ;)

      Now its about 1998 or so... Hard drive capacity is exceeding 10 gigs for the new drives, and steadily every month some new announcement comes out that pushes the standards. By this point I was ripping CD's from friends, from the library, from business associates, and having a great time all the while.

      Divx movies? Not yet.. we'll get to that.

      By the end of 1998 I had gone from perhaps 2 gigs of mp3 (when I first started seriously collecting via dialup) to over 50.

      Again, the needs, requirements, passions, desires, consequences and usage of hard drives were changing upwards all the while. Hard drive manufacturers knew what was really pushing their sales, and they worked that much harder to fill the "need for space".

      Divx movies. By this time I was downloading 2 movies a day, easily, via napster and my friends on BeShare. Getting a whopping 100k/sec in 1999 ROCKED, and I had amassed over 300 GIGS of just media (mp3 and movies only) within six months on disc.

      No, I didn't store all of it on hard drive. I was a frequent purchaser of CDR at the local office supplies store, and got very good discounts. ;) People would ask/wonder what I was doing buying 50 CDR at a time, each and every week almost... I would just smile and say, "backups".

      Its amazing. I don't see an immediate end to the cycle yet. As for violations of the MPAA/RIAA... Fuck 'em. They're a monopoly, they don't deserve any money for the next 1000 years, and should wake up to the open nature of the internet. I feel absolutely no shame for collecting, burning, sharing, distributing and using thousands of GIGS worth of data over my short c
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 12, 2004 @05:21AM (#8541583)
    9.0 watt idle power (Parallel ATA)

    9.6 watt idle power (Serial ATA)
    Interesting that SATA power consumption is slightly higher than PATA. My naive assumption was that fewer wires would yield marginally lower power consumption. Might this hold back adoption in laptops and other battery-backed devices?
    • Rather than re-tooling all their custom ICs to handle serial ATA, tha vast majority of new SATA hard drives are simply placing SATA to PATA converter chips on board. These chips account for the additional power consumption.

      -Adam
  • MTBF (Score:4, Insightful)

    by rf0 ( 159958 ) * <rghf@fsck.me.uk> on Friday March 12, 2004 @05:41AM (#8541636) Homepage
    One thing that worries me is that in the release it says "The Deskstar 7K400 is ideally suited for nearline storage and other low I/O applications" i.e. don't use it much. Also I can't find the MTBF which is worrying

    Rus
    • Re:MTBF (Score:3, Informative)

      by farnz ( 625056 )
      The specs [hgst.com] say that the MTBF is 1 in 10E14. I suspect that the reason why it suggests low I/O applications is that the amount of data stored is huge per disk, and if you need to shift 400GB regularly, a RAID of smaller drives would work better.
  • Hard drive death (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 12, 2004 @08:08AM (#8542279)
    In the past 3 years, I've had 3 of my hard drives die.

    Meanwhile, the 340 megger in my 486 firewall chugs away, having turned ~11 years old this year.

    I remain skeptical that "bigger is better" in the hard drive world. Before they advertise size and speed, give me a hard drive with vastly improved quality and longevity, and *then* I'll become interested.
  • by amichalo ( 132545 ) on Friday March 12, 2004 @08:14AM (#8542302)
    Is the size of the drive starting to be like the megahertz myth? I mean, aren't two 200GB drives faster/better than one 400GB in any application where the physicial size is not a limitation (laptop/blade)? Lets say you were editing digital video and then saving the stream in real time. Seems simultaneous read/write ability would be huge. Large drives become even less significant in non physician size limited applications when you can view two devices as one partition.

    For desktop use, there are so many open drive bays in a PC that I think I prefer two drives to one monster.
  • Drives 137 gigs (Score:4, Informative)

    by Henry V .009 ( 518000 ) on Friday March 12, 2004 @09:04AM (#8542585) Journal
    There can be some issues with the bigger drives. I just got a 200 Gig hard drive and it turns out that the default Debian installer won't work on it. Apparently kernels before 2.4.19 can't recognize drives bigger than 137 gigs. (Not this drive anyway). I had to install Debian through Knoppix. Even Windows XP won't recognize it unless you've got SP1.
    • Re:Drives 137 gigs (Score:4, Interesting)

      by EnglishDude ( 580283 ) on Friday March 12, 2004 @10:51AM (#8543452)
      Also apparently you need an ATA133 controller to see more than 137 GB - I had that problem when I put in a 200GB drive into a co-worker's computer, the BIOS would only see the first 137GB, so I had to get him to buy an ATA133 controller to see the rest of the 200GB. Just as well, he wanted those upgrades as he's a filmmaker, and ATA133 would help a little over ATA66 the computer has.
  • by Gorphrim ( 11654 ) on Friday March 12, 2004 @09:16AM (#8542666)
    My God, it's full of pr0n.
  • by Erik_ ( 183203 ) * on Friday March 12, 2004 @12:19PM (#8544475)
    One of the most interesting feature of the disk, is the Auto-Spin disabler jumper. When using proper IDE RAID controllers (namely 3ware), the Auto-Spin disabler can be used to slowly spin up a large array of disks without blowing up your PSU.
  • remember the GXP's (Score:3, Informative)

    by MoFoQ ( 584566 ) on Friday March 12, 2004 @12:23PM (#8544516)
    just remember, Hitachi bought IBM's failed hard drive division, and subsequentially, new Hitachi drives are based on the designs and technologies acquired from IBM. Unfortunately, I'm not crazy or have the guts to play russian roulette with 6 live rounds in a sixshooter (as oppose to the customary single bullet) with my data. I've lost alot already. All 9 IBM 75GXP's I've purchased have died and several 120GXP's that my friends got, against my strongest opposition, have dead also.

    What ticks me off the most was that IBM's tech support denied and denied and I got stuck with dead drives that were at the time under warranty.

    Although, I would like to see some hardware review site put the Hitachi drives under MASSIVE long-term stress tests (not just one drive but several 10s of 'em or so).

    For Hitachi, it's a major uphill battle. They'll have to somehow prove their worthiness again. For one, maybe they shouldn't use the name "Deskstar" as it is synonymous to "Deathstar." Distancing themselves from IBM's flaws would be best for them. It's like how auto-makers make a sub-brand of themselves to distant themselves from the typical stereotypes and so they can sell for more and look classy too (Lexus, Acura, Infiniti, etc.).

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