Posted on 01/31/2014 11:36:36 AM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach
Seagate Technology said at a conference call with investors and financial analysts that it would release a hard disk drive with 6TB capacity in the beginning of the second quarter, 2014. The company did not reveal a lot of details about the upcoming product, but noted that this would be an enterprise-class hard drive.
We are continuing to expand our offering of high capacity drives with our six-disk, 6TB drive shipping early next quarter, said Steve Luczo, chairman and chief executive of Seagate.
At present 6TB hard disk drives in 3.5 form-factor are available exclusively from Western Digital Corp.s HGST. Those drives are based on the HelioSealed platform and are filled with helium, which allows to install up to seven platters into an industry-standard package.
(Excerpt) Read more at xbitlabs.com ...
Bloatware is right. I remember in the 1990s when Bill Gates scoffed that any home user would EVER need even a fraction of that amount of storage.
Mine also I bought it direct from Crutchfield and it came with Joe Montana football.
Last year in November I purchased a digital download from Amazon for the MMORPG Secret World it takes up 39 gigs on my Hard drive. (Not Megs but Gigs!)
What is the really astonishing thing is if I had the cash I paid for that first Crutchfield computer now I could buy 4-5 better computers for the same money.
That 10mb mfm drive cost me upwards of $900 "back in the day."
Compare that to the 8 core, 4.2ghz 32GB memory w/GE Force GT660 GPU and Samsung EVO SSD home computer that I built for just under $750 and you can easily see how fast technology has advanced -and cheapened over time.
I must be getting old (I am ....) the first Data Center I managed had less than 3TB of storage across several very physically large Storage Array's.
I have more storage spinning at home now (10TB) than the first three data centers I managed back in the late 80's -- combined.
The Bank I work for now purchases storage in Petabytes. I couldn't tell you how many Petabytes we have -- online -- much less archived off. It's just incredible how storage keeps growing, and growing, and growing.
I personally just "back up" my stuff to a HDD, label it, remove it, and put it on the shelf if I ever need it again. The cost per TB is just so cheap now that it's the easiest and cheapest way for me to do backups anymore.
When I need something off one of those drives, I just slide it into my XDrive SATA external docking device and copy it off. Easy peasy.
very true
I remember seeing a plain old CD burner way back, it was about a grand. lol
“I remember my first hard drive was 200 megs.”
Mine was 20MB and damn was it WAY bigger and faster
than floppies!
What a coincidence. I bought my first PC from Crutchfield and that 286 Goldstar cost me $2000. That was quite a chunk of change back in 1987. :)
Unquestionably.
and access times are faster.
Huh?
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