
Hitachi to Release Half TB Drive Soon 607
samdu writes "Hitachi has announced plans to release a 7200 RPM 3.5 inch 500 GB hard drive in the first quarter of this year." Maybe this one won't require a new motherboard to use. I think I've replaced more mobo's to handle larger drives than I have to support faster CPUs.
yay! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:yay! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:yay! (Score:3, Funny)
i'm confused...
Tonight at 10 (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Tonight at 10 (Score:3, Interesting)
I have replaced more drives that are only 2-3 years old in the past 4 years than in my 15 year career.
Drives below the 20 gig mark are much more reliable, and drives over the 120 gig mark seem to be the most unreliable.
to hell with more space, give me a drive that will actually last the life of the pc.
It's so bad that I only buy Segate server class IDE drives for the workstations here. Dell will give you funny questions if you order Pc's without os or hard driv
Re:Tonight at 10 (Score:3, Funny)
That's the dumbest thing I've ever heard. You should have partitioned it into three 66.6GB partitions and made it RAID 5, then it would be fast and fault tolerant.
Well what an interesting article (Score:3, Insightful)
So... anyone got anything interesting to say?
Re:Well what an interesting article (Score:2)
Buying one will get me
That's cool.
Re:Well what an interesting article (Score:5, Insightful)
Seriously... isn't this a wonderful industry?
If you answered "no" to the above question, please exit stage left. Thanks for playing.
I don't consider myself "old", but my first PC was an XT with *dual* 5.25" floppy drives (that required a soldering iron for overclocking when there was no such word as "overclocking"). My second PC was a 386SX with an 80 megabyte hard drive.
As much as I knew it would happen (just looking at the graphs in Byte Magazine was enough to see that), it is still amazing to me. I'm just happy to be working in such a dynamic industry.
Enough nostalgia for now...
Re:Well what an interesting article (Score:3, Insightful)
Bah! My first computer used a cassette to load programs (at about 300 baud, I think). Eventually, we got a single floppy for it (single sided, what's that, 180K?)
(and, yes, I guess I do consider myself old. though at least I never used 8" disks.)
Re:Well what an interesting article (Score:3, Interesting)
It had BASIC, and I COULD NOT save programs on any media. It was battery operated (4 AA iirc), and I lost all memory when changing.
it had 160*32 pixels display, and I got good at writing games for it, and drawing out quadratic equations. I carried it in my jacket pocket.(That was 1984).
link: http://pocket.free.fr/html/casio/pb-700_e.html [pocket.free.fr]
My friend had a
Re:Well what an interesting article (Score:2)
Re:Well what an interesting article (Score:3, Interesting)
My next was a Mac SE, with a 20 megabyte hard drive and an 800K disk drive. After that was the 386SX with the 80MB hard drive.
I remember the first time I ever heard the word gigabyte. My uncle had a Giga-ROM CD for Mac - 650 megs of archives, over a gigabyte of software on one disc! It took me forever to look through a tent
Re:Well what an interesting article (Score:2)
Searching the archives out of curiosity didn't yield any results with the obvious key words...
Re:Well what an interesting article (Score:2)
Someone correct me if I am wrong because I plan to go back in the pc industry soon and need to know these things.
Re:Well what an interesting article (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Well what an interesting article (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Well what an interesting article (Score:3, Interesting)
so we got that goin' for us. which is good.
Re:Well what an interesting article (Score:3, Interesting)
I guess it's not that exciting in day-to-day news, but it's important to realize that the evolution from the first computer to the one you're reading this article on wasn't made in a giant leap -- it took years and many many many small improvements.
Re:Well what an interesting article (Score:3, Funny)
My cat's breath smells like cat food. Well it does...
Re:I've got a rant.. laptops hard drives (Score:3, Insightful)
Anything over a 40GB still cost a pretty penny and 5400/7200rpm disks are still the exception rather than the norm in laptops.
And good luck finding laptop hard drives above 100GB.
Re:I've got a rant.. laptops hard drives (Score:3, Insightful)
As far as transfer performance, you can transfer the most data where the platter is spinning the fastest - on the outer edge. The 3.5" hard drives' edge spins that much
Re:Well what an interesting article (Score:2)
Can you post the recipe? I'm sure the mods won't bother modding you down, they'll save the points for politics or vi/emacs.
3.0Gb/s - 817 Mb/s? (Score:4, Interesting)
While it's nice to something as fast as possible, is there a point to have a 3.0Gb/s interface to a product that can only handle 817Mb/s?
Re:3.0Gb/s - 817 Mb/s? (Score:5, Informative)
While it's nice to something as fast as possible, is there a point to have a 3.0Gb/s interface to a product that can only handle 817Mb/s?
On drive cache.
Not applicable (Score:4, Informative)
Re:3.0Gb/s - 817 Mb/s? (Score:2)
The drive's onboard cache runs a lot faster than the drive itself.
Re:3.0Gb/s - 817 Mb/s? (Score:4, Informative)
Yes.
Re:3.0Gb/s - 817 Mb/s? (Score:2)
Re:3.0Gb/s - 817 Mb/s? (Score:2)
When you get a read hit, you get it at 3GB/s. And more importantly, when you queue a write to the drive, you do it at 3GB/s. With SATA, like SCSI or fibre, you can queue a bunch of writes and have the drive order them in a mechanically-optimal manner. Meanwhile, your computer can do other things, including issue reads.
Re:3.0Gb/s - 817 Mb/s? (Score:2, Informative)
Rooms full of drives (Score:5, Interesting)
Now I can hold a TB in one hand...
I like this decade better.
Re:Rooms full of drives (Score:5, Funny)
>Now I can hold a TB in one hand...
>I like this decade better.
Because you are now on steroids?
to paraphrase: (Score:2)
Re:Rooms full of drives (Score:3, Funny)
use for backup (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:use for backup (Score:2)
Re:use for backup (Score:2)
Re:use for backup (Score:3, Insightful)
At least you backup...
I'm not so sure you are gaining anything though. Your point is correct, and 5.4k drives don't run as hot, two points in your favor.
However, that assumes everything else is the same. If they used higher quality components in the faster drive, it might last longer. It wouldn't surprise me, an extra $.05 on bearings can make a large difference in the price after all the layers of suppliers is gone through, enough to account for the difference in price.
Its all just speculation unl
Yay....but (Score:4, Funny)
Inching up (Score:3, Funny)
Now, when am I going to see this capacity in my iPod? ...
I continue to be amazed.... (Score:2)
Just where to they squeeze these extra bits from on the same size platter?
Re:I continue to be amazed.... (Score:5, Funny)
It's actually a compression algorithm. You know that computers store information as a series of ones and zeroes, right? Well, they just added a driver that writes only the ones, not the zeroes, instantly doubling the storage space.
After that, it's been a matter of building the drives with smaller and smaller pencils to write those ones side-by-side. When hard disks were first introduced, they used a standard #2 pencil sharpened down to the eraser, but eventually they moved to mechanical pencils, then realized they could use the mechanical pencil lead without the pencil at all.
Today, special microscopic pencils can be built one molecule at a time. The "eraser threshold" (currently the smallest one is 0.00003 centimeters in diameter) is a key factor in manufacturing drives.
A Fairy Tale (Score:5, Funny)
One day Hitachi invented a 500 gigabyte drive. The RIAA said "The public is evil, that's 100,000 5 MB MP3s!" Then the MPAA cried "The public is evil, that's over seven hundred 700 MB xvid movies!" So their lobbyists went to Washington to get these high capacity drives made illegal. And their shareholders lived happily ever after.
The End
Re:A Fairy Tale (Score:3, Insightful)
No, it's going to go like this:
The ??AA said "The public is evil, they're going to use these devices for theft of our precious "IP"! Since we can't control this, we demand a blanket levy put on these devices, made payable to our puppet umbrella organisation whose purpose it is to "fairly" distribute said levy to ourselves."
The ??AA members could then lie back and enjoy their new "tax", having no more incentive to actually produce anything. "Who would have thought, that taxes could be so much fun?", They
Re:A Fairy Tale (Score:3, Interesting)
Your original quotes were far too logical - and mathematically accurate - to ever originate from the RIAA.
Even worse, AT&T could claim that the drive could store 897 copies of an old
Sounds like an OS problem ... (Score:4, Informative)
Seriously, as long as you get the kernel in the part of the disk that your motherboard supports, (or don't boot off that disk at all), Linux will work with it, no matter what motherboard you've got. No 128GB limit to worry about, even if you don't have ATA/100 (or is it ATA/133 that is supposedly required to support 128GB+ drives?)
I've even read those 200+ GB disks on a Pentium 120 Dell's onboard controllers on Linux. No problem -- Linux knew to ignore the BIOS settings on the drive and just made it work.
Re:Sounds like an OS problem ... (Score:4, Interesting)
All it can support under DOS/Windows is 8GB. It's so ancient the MB doesn't even support IDE CD-ROM booting.
Re:Sounds like an OS problem ... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Sounds like an OS problem ... (Score:4, Informative)
By old, I mean DOS old -- I don't even think Windows 95 uses the BIOS for disk access once booted up unless it has no other choice. OS/2 had an int 13h driver that it could use if there was no other option -- but you certainly didn't want to use it unless you had to, because the performance sucked.
The problem is that Windows blindly trusts what the BIOS returns for the drive parameters. A smart OS can ignore the BIOS settings if they don't match what the drive itself returns. It can also look at the partition table and use those settings instead of what the BIOS reports, if that makes more sense.
I said OS issue. I meant it. Oh, I've come across it. And I know it's a pain. But I certainly wouldn't replace a motherboard for it -- I'd either 1) update the BIOS (if an update available), 2) add an external IDE card (which has it's own BIOS), or 3) or pick an OS that can handle the BIOS issue better. Another option might be one of those `boot managers' that comes with the large drives as well -- they add a little bit of code that fools Windows into seeing the correct drive parameters instead of what the BIOS returns.But if my P120 box can read a 200 GB disk with it's internal controller, I'm guessing that almost anything can. But the BIOS on that computer can't handle anything over 8 GB properly, so Windows would be out of the question.
Re:Sounds like an OS problem ... (Score:3, Informative)
How many movies, MP3s can one possibly use? (Score:4, Insightful)
That is a seriously interesting question (Score:2)
Is this some kind of new obsession - just because it's becomming almost technically feasible?
Re:How many movies, MP3s can one possibly use? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:How many movies, MP3s can one possibly use? (Score:2)
- Digital video editing
- Digital photography (7MP+ soon to become the norm)
- Music
- Movies (Porn)
- Games taking up multiple GB
In a few years it won't be enough.
Re:How many movies, MP3s can one possibly use? (Score:2)
Re:How many movies, MP3s can one possibly use? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:How many movies, MP3s can one possibly use? (Score:2)
The final EP took up nearly 40 GB of space, for a 25 minute album. If they'd had a full albums worth of stuff to record, it might have hit 100 GB.
And that's just audio. No video at all. Someone doing the full A/V editing for a feature length film could probably fill that 500 GB harddrive twice over in the course of the project.
I can see why someone needs this much space, easy.
Re:How many movies, MP3s can one possibly use? (Score:2)
I can remember getting a 125Mb HDD with my first PC (a 486-33!) to the extreme jealousy of all my geeky friends. I thought I'd never fill it. 2 years later Microsoft released Windows 95
Re:How many movies, MP3s can one possibly use? (Score:2, Funny)
Drive arrays for consumers (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Drive arrays for consumers (Score:3, Interesting)
The loss of performance and capacity might be worth it in some situations if it mitigated some decent-sized portion of drive failures.
Another idea I had was the ability to daisy-chain drives directly together and have a "direct" RAID system without a seperate controller, using RAID logic integrat
Why not read platters in parralel (Score:2)
Scotty, I need more power... (Score:2, Funny)
Screw that, keep those system designers off my power supply, I want more power not less!!
Why not faster? (Score:5, Interesting)
Is it technically difficult? Is it unnessecary?
And now that I think about it, what is taking those solid state disks so long ?
Re:Why not faster? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Why not faster? (Score:2, Informative)
I don't know exactly what the mechanical problems are, but 10,000 RPM is pretty friggin fast. I remember years ago hearing that 4,800 was the absolute fastest speed they could go for some reason or another.
Re:Why not faster? (Score:2)
I think you'd have to spin these things *way* beyond 10K RPM before they would significantly deform under centripetal loading, and many times that before they would actually 'explode'.
The amount of power used to spin up such a system (and keep it spinning) is almost insignificant if your bearings are sufficently low-friction.
Re:Why not faster? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Why not faster? (Score:2)
As for solid-state disks, they've come an amazing way. It's just that their cost relative to hard disks is still bad. But relative to their original costs, they've probably done as well as platters in terms of price/bit.
Re:Why not faster? (Score:5, Informative)
There's also that RPM is not the only way of making things faster. Basically, the performance of a hard disk is determined by 3 variables:
Rotational latency: The time it takes for the disk to spin into the right position. That is, once the head is on the right place, this is how long it has to wait for the data to pass under it. More RPM translates into less rotational latency.
Seeking latency: The time it takes for the drive's assembly to get into the right position.
These two are often added up in the statistics. Solid state drives pretty much lack them. I'm setting up now a firewall that boots from CompactFlash on CF-IDE adapter, and it boots really fast despite a transfer rate of only 2 MB/s. Latency can add up to quite a lot.
Data rate: The speed at which the drive reads or writes data once everything is in the right place. This is a function of the RPM and data density. More speed means the data passes under the heads faster. More density means there's more data per square inch.
So, increasing RPM is one way of getting more performance. The other one is packing more data into the same place. Some drives have small platters for this reason. This also means that a bigger drive is often also faster than a smaller one, given identical RPM, platter size, and number of platters.
Ok we have almost had all the typical responses (Score:2, Troll)
Good job.
We got the when will we see this kind of capacity on my iPod post.
Good job.
Now all the need is -- (drum roll please) --
But does linux support it yet?
Re:Ok we have almost had all the typical responses (Score:2)
(Or maybe... "In Soviet Russia, Half-Terabit drives release Hitachi" or "In Korea, only old people use half-terabit drives" or "Netcraft confirms..." or... ARGH!)
What I never understood.... (Score:2)
Re:What I never understood.... (Score:3, Insightful)
LBA is what they SHOULD have done from the start, it abstracts the specific geometry from the amount of space on the drive. Anyone who remembers having to dial-in CHS values knows this, LBA is a godsend. The reason it wasn't implemented from the start was that it would shift processing (sector locating) to the drives themselves, which wasn't cheap to do in the eighties and early nineties. LBA has also been the standard for a LONG while now, and besides a minor bump in
Hitachi, feh (Score:3, Insightful)
Yes, I know I was burned by IBM rather than Hitachi, but when I was asking some techs who still work in the tranches about it, saying that they were not big fans of Hitachi drives would be putting it lightly.
only the 75GXP line (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Hitachi, feh (Score:3, Informative)
Thread on SR (Score:4, Informative)
500GB not for speed (Score:2)
I'm sure there will be a PCI card that you can tie into, these type of monster size drives aren't typically used because of their speed, they're used for storage of various things.
If it were about performance you're probably not going to use this style of drive anyways. When your storage needs aren't limited by size persay but by I/O, you'd be better off investing the money in a scsi solution. Especially if yo
Impressive (Score:2)
Sounds like the CmdrTaco Center for Pornography Storage is doing pretty well. At least we know the Slashdot subscription fees are going to a worthy cause.
Well Crap (Score:2)
Why new motherboard to handle drives? (Score:2)
An alternative to buying a new motherboard is to just buy a PCI IDE controller. The only reason for the upgrade is so that enough bits are used to address all of the sectors on the disk; the interface otherwise doesn't change. In fact, new hard disks sometimes come with controller cards in a bundle if you're too cheap to pay the $20. I'm currently running a pa
The home-brew video server comes closer to reality (Score:5, Interesting)
But last night I was looking at the price for Hitachi's 400Gb IDE drive ($368 on at newegg.com) and figured that I could throw a pretty decent video server together for about five kilobux. I was thinking of getting a big case and power supply, eight of these drives and an Adaptec eight port SATA raid controller. Set up a Linux system, set up the drives and RAID controller as RAID-5 and you could get about 2,500Gb of storage, which works out to about 265 DVD images (assuming that each image was a from a dual layer disc and 9.4 Gb in size. Use SMB over gigabit ethernet to mount these images to your clients and then play whatever you like. Eight 500 Gb drives would give you about 3,200Gb of storage which works out to 340 images (making the same assumptions about the size of each DVD). I'm sure there are better ways of doing this, this is just what I came up with off of the top of my head.
Note that this assumes that you're not doing any processing on the DVDs. With a tool such as DVD-Shrink you could increase the amount of images you were able to store by stripping out alternate soundtracks, extra features and even the menus. And with DiVX re-encoding you might be able to (I don't know much about DiVX so comments would be appreciated) reprocess the video streams so that they used less space but were not visibly reduced in quality. If I had a spare 5 kilobux to blow right now I'd build one of these as a mighty heigh-ho and fuck you to Bill Gates, Jack Valenti and all of the other assholes in Hollywood and have the pleasure of having a whole-house video solution.
Problems with scaling (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm not saying they'll fail once every six months. I'm saying that on average they will. More than likely, three will fail in a single mont
Re:The home-brew video server comes closer to real (Score:3, Interesting)
about lossy reencoding. (Score:3, Insightful)
So to anwser your question, converting to DivX will result in both a generational loss, and some mpeg-4 specific loss of quality
DIVX Saves Bandwidth (Score:3, Interesting)
I have a 1TB media server RAID-5 NTFS array (vintage 2002 so it's not a speed demon but still respectable - maxes out the PCI!). I back it up using FW400 (also not the fastest these days) onto an external [compgeeks.com] 1TB RAID-1 array.
Anyway, one advantage I have noticed about DIVX over DVD is reduced bandwidth. You can get very respectable video quality from 1.5Mbps DIVX, versus ~4-5 times that DVD. Either of these is acceptable over wired connections, but 802.11a barely allows acceptable
What use is this? (Score:2, Insightful)
1. My music collection? Nope, DRM prevents me from burning my CD's anymore...
2. Digital movies? Nope, again DRM requires me to buy a seperate copy of each work, even for backup purposes.
3. Software? Nope, that's all subscription based, I just get to pay my $37.50 a month and be happy with what they choose to offer.
So, I'm left with
Re:What use is this? (Score:2)
2. You could try making your own.
3. You could try writing your own.
speed, not space! (Score:2, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:HDTV!!! (Score:2)
How do I backup the entire HD? (Score:2)
Big & Cheap drives (Score:2)
Yeah, I guess spending $25 and dropping in a Promise ATA controller is too much effort. Western Digital was even bundling them with the drives for a while.
Funny thing, those controllers perform significantly faster than many built-in IDEs. My nforce2 MBs have IDE defects that cause lockups that require power cycles to clear (reset won't do it). I don't even use the on-board IDE on those boxes.
I have been buyin
1 terabyte? (Score:2, Insightful)
Linux-compatible SATA II controller cards? (Score:3, Interesting)
Most motherboards currently in use don't have SATA support built-in, and even the news ones that do may come with chipsets that haven't got complete Linux support yet.
Since my next motherboard and drives may well be all SATA, it would make sense to start adding SATA drives to my current setup using an add-on controller card.
Or just add a tax (Score:2)
They can point to the tax we pay on blank VHS tapes as an example.
Backing up 1TB (Score:3, Interesting)
I have a 1TB RAID-5 NTFS array (vintage 2002 so it's not a speed demon but still respectable - maxes out the PCI!). I back it up using FW400 (also not the fastest these days) onto an external [compgeeks.com] 1TB RAID-1 array. Using ntbackup with write-verify it takes 2 days for the backup, and 1 day for the verify.
XXCopy [xxcopy.com] is quicker - takes around 1 day for write+verify.
These times would be cut to around a fifth if the data travelled over a f
Re:Not to taco (Score:3, Insightful)
Wow. Amazing how Linux can solve hardware problems in software.
As many things as it can do, even Linux won't access an entire drive if your IDE controller isn't capable of 48-bit addressing. Really. If the controller itself doesn't have the capability of addressing the entire drive, you're screwed from the start. Don't believe me? Get an old P2 motherboard, plop a 200-gig drive in, boot up Knoppix