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New Hard Drives Hold a Terabyte of Data

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New Hard Drives Hold a Terabyte of Data
Lamont Wood
Special to LiveScience
LiveScience.com
Mon Apr 9, 8:30 AM ET


Just when you got used to hard drives with hundreds of gigabytes (hundreds of billions of bytes) they do it: make one with a terabyte (a trillion bytes).

Yes, you can now get a terabyte hard drive on a desktop PC. Breaking the ice with a Hitachi drive was Dell, with “Area 51” game-oriented machines from its Alienware subsidiary. The 1T option initially costs $500.

In case you’re wondering, as printed text a terabyte would occupy 100 million reams of paper, consuming some 50,000 trees. It is enough to hold 16 days (not hours) of DVD-quality video, or a million pictures, or almost two years worth of continuous music.

You might not have any songs that last for two years, but that’s irrelevant, indicated Henry Baltazar, storage analyst for The 451 Group, a technology analyst firm in San Francisco. “There will be a demand for it, since a lot of people have digital media, like movies, pictures and music,” Baltazar told LiveScience.

“Larger devices will become more commonplace, and we will see the same kind of transition from gigabyte to terabyte drives as we previously saw from megabyte to gigabyte drives—in fact, the move from 500 gigabytes to a terabyte has taken longer than expected.”

The leap from 500G to 1T required a breakthrough in “areal density” (how tight the bytes are packed on the surface of the disk), according to Doug Pickford, a marketing executive at Hitachi Global Storage Technologies. The trick, he explained, was to move to Perpendicular Magnetic Recording (PMR), where each bit is a perpendicular rather than a linear magnetized spot on the disk—as if the bits were standing up rather than lying down.

Currently, areal density is growing at about 35 to 40 percent per year, and the techniques used to create the 1T drive are expandable to make a 5T drive, Pickford said. More work will be needed to surpass the 5T hurdle, but he foresaw no physical limitations until drives reach a capacity of at least 50T.

At that point, they’ll hold about a century of music.

Incidentally, for planning purposes, the next level is the petabyte (a quadrillion bytes); and then the exabyte (one quintillion bytes); and then the zettabyte (one sextillion bytes); and then the yottabyte (one septillion bytes.)
New Technique Stores Data in Bacteria New Computer Hard Drives Better, Faster, Stronger Broadband's Powerful Future Original Story: New Hard Drives Hold a Terabyte of Data
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http://news.yahoo.com/s/livescience...abyteofdata;_ylt=AjojyxJhwDf5tQnu609sYEwDW7oF
 
I already have three external drives that total 2T for my music (2 500 and 1T).

And it's apparent I'll need more room soon 8'/.
 
And I remember when I added another 200mb harddrive years ago to my first computer I thought "I'll never need any more space." :lol:
 
oh i salavate at seeing the 750 GB drives at best buy. but damn it, i wish they'd change how they count that stuff. i mean a 750 GB drive should be how much space it on it once it's formated not before hand. i mean you lose lots of GBs just to formating.
 
Vienna is the next MS OS and it won't take 2.5TB to install

I'm not so sure...............................

Back to the subject, I have a 120 GB hard drive and it's getting small... I need one of those 1 TB disks... when will they release them in 2.5" format for laptops?????

I remember when everything had to fit in my 210 MB hard disk or in 1.44 MB floppy disks. And somehow it did... I used to have hundreds of diskettes though.
 
Vienna??? :confused: I think i missed a memo.... fill me in?

as noelie said vienna is the next windows and as apparently been in development since the same time as vista and will feature a completly differant GUI they are supposed to be ditching the start menu so it should be interesting and is supposed to be out in 2-3 years
 
After I had both a 200GB and a 160GB backup disk crashing, I'm kind of reserved towards huge harddisk space. Be sure to buy two 1TB harddisks for backup, I wouldn't want such a disk to crash.

Although I just bought a 320GB now... but this time I'm going to use it mainly for files that I can easily download from the net again, do a directory dump to a text file as a content summary and the personal data will get a second backup on DVDs.
 
My first computer (Packard Bell PIII 450) only had a 6GB HDD and 128MB RAM.... I wouldn't even be able to store ⅕ of my music on that! I now have a combined 410GB HDD and only 1GB RAM in my iMac.
 
I have all WD ide drives. I have a 360, 320, and a 250. I also have 2 external IDE's i've put in enclosures. i think one is a 160 and the other is a 120. ;) do i have over 1 TB yet? ;)
 
My first computer (Packard Bell PIII 450) only had a 6GB HDD and 128MB RAM.... I wouldn't even be able to store ? of my music on that! I now have a combined 410GB HDD and only 1GB RAM in my iMac.

Well my first computer was a Commodore 64, with a whopping 32 KILOBYTES of RAM! My Mum couldn't afford the 10 MB hard drive, so everything I did or loaded was saved to cassette tape. An average game would take 20-30 minutes to load!!

Nowadays my video edit suite has around 15 TB of storage, and even my phone has a GB of storage space.
 
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