Hitachi answers Seagate with its own half-terabyte self-encrypting HDD

By Scott M. Fulton, III | Published November 11, 2008, 11:57 AM

In a week where all electronics manufacturers are considering how to tailor their value propositions for the demands of the new economy, Hitachi GST is not one to be left behind.

Just one day after Seagate's announcement that it will be introducing self-encrypting half-terabyte hard drives to the notebook market, Hitachi's Global Storage Technologies division is announcing its own entry in that category. For the past four years, Hitachi has been answering Seagate's Momentus series with its own Travelstar; and in this particular case, Hitachi has chosen to merge its low-power "green" focus with its secure and trusted campaign.

Though the announcements are one day apart, here is one principal difference: Hitachi is focusing on the half-terabyte design, which is promises to ship by the first quarter of next year. Seagate meanwhile is rolling out its design with 320 GB right away, and a 160 GB model installed in Dell notebook systems now, while only promising the 500 GB option "soon."

Hitachi uses the phrase Bulk Data Encryption (BDE) to describe its system-on-a-chip technology for ensuring all data written to the disk is encrypted, without reliance upon the system BIOS or on-board software; Seagate refers to Full Disk Encryption (FDE), though the concept is essentially identical. Both companies have been jockeying for position over whether the latest incarnation of their technologies are, or will be, accepted by Trusted Platform Modules -- an important factor for businesses that have implemented TCG recommendations in their security schemes. This morning, Hitachi said it believed its new Travelstars will be first in its category to support TPMs. But even though Seagate omitted mention of TPMs yesterday, there's no reason to believe its new Momentus drives would not support them, because its current models up to 120 GB do.

Where Hitachi has historically fallen short against Seagate is in the performance department -- a fact which continues to be verified in independent tests. But where Hitachi can claim an advantage here (if not a little bit of an excuse) is in power reduction; any degradation in performance can perhaps be explained away by its lower power drain.

In the end, today's customer will be more concerned with price; and with business-class laptop drives, the customer is going to be a corporate system builder who is replacing unencrypted drives in existing laptops with encrypted ones. That customer will be purchasing in low bulk -- greater than one, fewer than 16.

So you have to pay some attention to Seagate's capability to take advantage of mass production. Right now, its regular (non-encrypted) Momentus 7200.3 250 GB model is selling online to OEMs for as low as eighty bucks, whereas Hitachi's 200GB Travelstar counterpart sells to the same customer for more than double that amount. Hitachi's "green" campaign will be able to justify a moderate price differential between its models and Seagate's, once they finally premiere probably in Q1 2009, but not a 100% price premium.

Comments

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no one needs or wants this

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What you mean is that YOU can't figure out need,

Others can, and the need has existed for quite some time now.

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It seems that there is a lot of competition in this space already which is great for us customers. I wonder if they have any near future plans for encrypted SSD?

my comments at http://www.commentino.com/orim

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1. encryption is prone to file corruption.
2. backup of data is not encrypted, unless you have another piece of software that is encrypting it.

This viscious cycle means data will never be safe or secure. Laptops will still get lost
and data will be compromised no matter what.

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What?

And what?!

Learn a bit more about encryption and the use of a hash.

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man.
these encryptions make forensic works so tough.

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Good, if you were being serious. I am tired of the government trying to come into my home and 'investigate' on my computer just because I have different views from the mainstream.
More encryption, more problems for the police, makes me HAPPY AS A LARK!

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Since when has the government come into your home and investigated the contents on your computer?

And if they have, you might want to stay of the net trolling for 13 year olds.

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You guys can mess with the $80 500GB drives and the new terabyte drives all you like!

I am busy backing up all my data to BR disks!

My backup should finish in approximately 2.38 days. I'll get back to you...

;-))

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Okay.... that was funny.

What you *need* is a RAID of BR burners. You could cut that time down to 18 hours, easily!

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Yes, burning Blu-Ray discs is SLOW. However, considering that I can back up everything on my drive that I wish to back up file by file (usually, the only things I 'back up' are my downloaded games from BitTorrent), the slow burning time of a Blu-Ray disc isn't bad.

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Looking forward for the competition. Competition is good and will drive down the price.

"whereas Hitachi's 200GB Travelstar counterpart sells to the same customer for more than double that amount"

I just bought 320 GB Notebook hard-drive from Hitachi (SATA),and it costs me 99 USD. You will just need to know where and when to buy it. Look for bargain :P.

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Well put!

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You're going to hate me, but...

http://www.mwave.com/mwa...c.hmx?scriteria=AA74098

$79.

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Yeah, but it's only a 5400rpm drive.

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So is the travelstar he was talking about. :)

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well, the one that i am talking is 7200 rpm though.

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Not to push things but. $90 shipped
http://www.newegg.com/Pr...px?Item=N82E16822136280

Cheers

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Last I checked, Hitachi was not *selling* a 320GB 7200 SATA notebook drive.

Got a link?

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Newegg has a 7200rpm Hitachi 320GB laptop drive.

http://www.newegg.com/Pr...px?Item=N82E16822145129

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