Seagate Mobile Hard Drive Hits 160GB

By Nate Mook | Published June 8, 2005, 11:24 AM

Hitachi isn't the only company getting perpendicular. Seagate rolled out the first 2.5-inch hard drive on Wednesday that utilizes perpendicular recording technology. By standing bits of data on end, rather than flat on the drive's surface, Seagate has achieved 160GB of storage - the largest notebook drive to date.

The new drive is part of Seagate's Momentus line, and will initially bring a speed of 5,400-rpm. A 7,200-rpm version will follow next year. Seagate also rolled transparent hardware-based encryption into the drives to protect data in the face of rising notebook theft.

Mobile professionals are "demanding stronger, easier to use encryption solutions to protect their sensitive information," said John Buttress, IDC's research manager for hard drives. "Drive manufacturers such as Seagate that can deliver stronger security and higher capacity using technologies such as perpendicular recording will be in the sweet spot of market demand for notebooks."

Hitachi jumpstarted the push to perpendicular recording in April, announcing plans to release 1TB desktop drives and 20GB microdrives.

Drives using parallel recording can store about 100 to 120 gigabits per square inch. With the new perpendicular method, Hitachi said drives can store 230 gigabits in the same space.

Seagate said the 160GB Momentus 5400.3 will ship this winter alongside the Momentus 5400 FDE (Full Disc Encryption). Pricing for the drives has not yet been announced.

Comments

View comments by with a score of at least

Seagate did it--now maybe laptops will have large capacity drives that don't die withen a year from heat problems :)

Score: 0

|

Wow....that's all that needs to be said.

Score: 0

|

After telling US to mind its own business, Kroes slaps caps on Rambus royalties

The holder of many patents worldwide pertaining to DDR memory offered to reduce its royalty stake in that technology, and today the EU said yes.

Why Apple succeeds, and always will

The company consistently plays by different rules, literally like David did in his battle against Goliath.

EC's Kroes to US senators: Mind your own business on Oracle + Sun

UPDATED The EU's antitrust chief told the United States Senate Tuesday that any merger that takes place in the world is more her affair than theirs.

Betanews Podcast: Rupert Murdoch and the buying stuff online problem

We'll have a more difficult time paying for online news if the underlying protocol for online payment has a big gaping hole in it.

In a peace offering to newspapers, Google offers a new news format

It's probably not a solution to the woes of major news publishers, but Living Stories may gather a few of those publishers together in search of one.

Google Maps doesn't prevent car accidents, only search accidents

This week, Google updated Maps for Android 3.3.1, adding topography, nearby points of interest, and error reporting.

DOJ: Microsoft interop docs are now 'substantially complete'

A major milestone in the US Government's oversight of Microsoft is passed, as the Justice Dept. is now saying the company's protocol documents make sense.

The $1 DVD rental debate: LA group says Redbox will lose movie makers $1B

A report from the Los Angeles Economic Development Corporation says cheap Redbox DVD rentals could seriously damage the movie business.

First impressions of Droid: Easy, breezy, friendly, if a little fat

Though it's not quite as well-polished as Apple's iPhone OS, the version of Android that Motorola's Droid phone sports is still a breeze to use.

Windows fix for TLS security bug still forthcoming, won't be Tuesday

Anyone looking for a fix for last month's discovery of a potentially serious security hole in TLS and SSL may have to wait until everyone is ready to act together.

Not the first, not the last, technology predictions for 2010

Carmi Levy | Wide Angle Zoom: The real truth is probably that what went around in 2009, will come around to haunt us next year.