Seagate and Maxtor Show Off New Stuff To Bloggers 46
Doggie Fizzle writes "Seagate held an event for bloggers and other media in the NYC area yesterday and rolled out some of their new items for show and tell. DAVE, the battery powered portable hard drive for WiFi/Bluetooth phones was being demoed. Some of the new FDE series of laptop and desktop drives with full (hardware based) disk encryption were on hand. And Maxtor's fourth generation of OneTouch external drives were on display and available to take home."
Battery powered hard drive? (Score:1, Troll)
Naw. Not at all...
Still, a cool idea, I suppose. But another device to carry around with you; unless you leave it in the glove box (can it run on a DC supply?) and, perhaps, use your phone (with the, perhaps built-in, FM transmitter) as an audio headend in the car.
Sorry for the run-on and any grammar issues. Actually, I'm not. It happens. Deal. And no, I did not RTFA; as I've said alot lately, I'm not that new her
Re:Battery powered hard drive? (Score:5, Funny)
Naw. Not at all...
Shit, I knew it we forgot something! Thank you, smart Slashdot reader!
- A Seagate engineer.
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Re:Battery powered hard drive? (Score:4, Informative)
I already store stuff on my phone (Score:2)
Re:Battery powered hard drive? (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually, I'm not so crazy about convergence. It wouldn't even occur to me to use my phone to listen to music or watch videos, in fact. Or play games. At most, I want my phone to hold...phone numbers. And addresses, and a simple calendar - maybe.
And I really don't want convergence into a device that costs a fortune. I use my bicycle a lot more than I use my car, and I know from experience that shit will happen. So my mp3 player is one of those 39 dollar 2 gig Sansdisk iPod killers (Fry's) that won't set me back too far if the headphone cord gets caught on the brake lever and pulls the thing out of my pocket and it bounces off the street and under a bus.
Actually, this has happened and it's still working. I wonder how an iPhone would have fared?
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The canonical answer, in convenient video form, is here:
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Seagate DAVE is conventional rotating disk, it's not volatile storage. Circuitry for shutting off writes during power-up and power-down is standard on hard disks and flash drives.
Solid State Drives? (Score:5, Insightful)
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http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/archives/000927.
Re:Solid State Drives? (Score:4, Insightful)
I want cheep, fast solid state. I don't care how big it is as long as it will plug into a sata or scsi slot and is at least 16 gigs. I can get huge magnetic drives for my large media; I want power-efficient, quiet and fast.
I would replace my laptop and all my non-primary-storage server drives with those in a heartbeat.
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They can basically keep up to 7200s, but use less power while emitting less heat and noise with lower latency. Once they hit higher distribution rates prices will drop and better tech will come out.
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The fuss is about speed and battery life. i don't know where you got the idea anyone was concerned about "dangerous" hard drives in 2007 -- unless you're using your laptop on a pogo stick, the built-in shock protection locking featu
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So in other words, you want a laptop that also has a capacitance keyboard, no DVD drive, and no hinges?
(no, no; I know what you mean...)
yessydO ecapS A : 1002 (Score:4, Funny)
I'm sorry, I can't do that DAVE.
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DAVE: I'm going to auto backup your files now, Dave.
Dave: No, don't do that right now, DAVE, I'm compiling.
DAVE: This mission is too important for me to allow you to jeopardize it.
Dave: Open the drive bay door, DAVE.
DAVE: I'm sorry Dave, I'm afraid I can't do that.
Dave: What's the problem?
DAVE: Dave, this conversation can serve no purpose anymore. Goodbye.
Dave: Where the hell'd you get that idea, DAVE?
DAVE: DAVE's not here, man.
Is it just me, ... (Score:1)
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Obligatory (Score:1)
When can I get a DAVE? (Score:2)
Just sell it to me already! I can't even get one of those BluOnyx things yet either.
Hopefully, somebody will respond by sa
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Digital Wallet anyone? (Score:3, Informative)
I guess that was ahead of it's time. It worked wonderfully for me.
IIRC, it was produced by a company called "Minds At Work" - which seems to be http://www.mindsatwork.net/ [mindsatwork.net], but it isn't loading for me (I'm in China, so it's not unusual)
Ah, here's DPReview's page on it : http://www.dpreview.com/reviews/digitalwallet/ [dpreview.com]
It's a shame when good products don't make it, only to be successful later for some other company
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This site contains no information on Minds@Work company and is not run by them.
This site was created so that the current owners of the DigitalWallet and MindStor can gain access to the latest drivers, firmware and manuals. All of the manuals have been moved to a Yahoo Group. You will also find the Mac format drivers there as well.
The New Stuff I'm waiting for (Score:4, Interesting)
LS
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Anyone who's gone through a failure without any backups knows the sickening feeling, and it can actually send people into depression
Lesson: Back Up Your Data buddy! I learned this lesson once the hard way myself, with a paper due in the morning. And I was pissed not depressed. I came to terms with the situation after re-writing 30 pages.
Results 1 of 1,530,000 for onetouch problems (Score:3, Informative)
I bought one. It exploded spectaculally. I rang 'Maxtor' [ie Seagate] - they didn't want to have anything to do with it.
3k in data recovery later. This seems to be a common scenario, I know of two others failing on friends - just google.
This may not be the case for all of their drives - but 'Buyer Beware'
Seagate vs. Flagstone? (Score:2)
OK, Seagate has announced (again) that they'll have full disk encryption. The last vaporware announcement went nowhere and, in the interim, I chose to use Flagstone [stonewood.co.uk] drives when I needed full disk encryption in hardware.
Now, just maybe Seagate is going to produce a real product that I can buy. Does anyone want to take a stab at comparing/contrasting the tech used by Seagate and Stonewood? The biggest desktop Flagstone drive is 80 gigs and I'd love to have something as trustworthy in a larger size.
A bu
Hardware encryption versus soft (Score:2)
I use TrueCrypt quite a bit and, generally, love it. I store a VM inside a TrueCrypt volume (using twofish encryption) and notice practically no slowdown in performance. Backing up volumes, drives, etc, is as simple as copying a big file elsewhere. Mounting this volume is done via keystroke shortcut. enter my 15 char password, and blammo, it's up and running.
With hardware encryption I would have to fall back on utilizing software encryption for any network backups th