OK I see the need for new long acronym-ed technologies to step in and help lengthen the life of the thick silver platter.
So how is this fundamentally different from when we moved from 1Gb to 4Gb hard disks back over a decade ago? hard disks have hit about 1Tb now havent they, so why is 4Tb in one HDD such a difficult thing requiring new double TLAs?
I don't remember it taking a good two years to achieve that leap. But then I could be wrong.
Or is it that the old spinny disks days are numbered due to flash RAMs much higher rate of capacity climb. I know they're only on 64Gb commercially now but have been climbing really quickly since around 2000 up from a lowly 16Mb!!
By Tony Smith, Editor, Reg HardwarePosted Monday 15th October 2007 15:19 GMT
You can build a 4TB drive now, but it'd be a chunky boy and probably not fit in the 3.5in form-factor.
The point is, any jump in capacity requires new technology: not only to get more data storage space into that 3.5in-format box, but also to allow the read/write heads to access it. This is just the latest of these jumps, and there'll be more in the future.
Flash is growing fast, but it'll be quite a while before we see reasonably priced 500GB Flash drives, let alone 1TB models.
Begs the question why there arent 5 1/4 inch hard disk drives specifically for PCs around then, but I would imagine that physically increasing drive sizes results in diminishing returns of performance, efficiency, and even capacity.
I was just surprised that Hitachi reckon it'll be a whole two years delay given development was quicker in the past.
Strange that the BBC reported the same story, different angle, but said they'd arrive in 2011, go figure!
By FranklinPosted Monday 15th October 2007 19:48 GMT
...we need to get rid of hard drives altogether.
I mean, c'mon. You open up the case of an ordinary desktop computer, and what do you see inside? Miracles of solid-state electronics, with circuits etched into silicon so small that quantum effects become a real engineering headache for the folks who design them...and then this big, whirring, spinning piece of antique Victorian clockwork.
It's appalling and embarrassing, really. Spinning disks of magnetic media? We need to chuck the clockwork already and move on to solid-state mass storage.
By Henry WertzPosted Monday 15th October 2007 21:38 GMT
Solid state is sweet, but it's expensive as all hell. And, with fabs at or near capacity, just increasing demand isn't going to lower prices for a while at least. I'm all for solid state, but not if it's going to cost me like $2000 to get a TB of storage...
By Anonymous CowardPosted Monday 15th October 2007 23:05 GMT
Isn't it ironic that the housing for 50nm-physics-tweaking-technology will be an undeniably-imperial-3.5-inch-box? So standards are everything in computing, but surely we have to switch standards sometime?
By ssundellPosted Tuesday 16th October 2007 04:42 GMT
Even though solid state sounds nice, that whirring Victoria is a piece of quantum mechanics in itself. That TMR head Hitachi plans to outdate makes heavy use of tunneling effect. Earlier GMR heads are based on - you said it - GMR, which in itself is a quantum effect and deals with electron spin. Fujitsu's creating nanohole patterns with 25nm pitch to further increase the data density in HDDs.
So yes, it may be whirring, but there's nothing antique about it.
With the advent of holographic memory, this is purely a "We can do this, just watch us!" scenario?
I thought they were dealing with holo-memory for the future? With a possible (theoretical without error correction) 4Gb per millimeter, surely "it's the future!" (Garlic Bread anyone?)
Spintronics is something already in development! Controlling the spin of an electron with a magnetic field to store either a 1 or a 0. Long way off production yet though.
By Alan DonalyPosted Tuesday 16th October 2007 21:53 GMT
to bring this up but WTF apparently in the US they are deciding whether to block imports of the top hdd manufacturers because of a patent being used without permission in the fabrication process anyway the one thats not being mentioned is Hitachi and all I have seen for the last couple of days are Hitachi commercials if they do block Seagate Western Digital it might mean cheap hdd
s for all outside the USA. I didn't make this up it's been in Ars Technica and on the USITC site.
Comments on: Hitachi halves hard drive head size
flash-back!! #
By Stu Posted Monday 15th October 2007 14:48 GMT
Re. Flash-back #
By Tony Smith, Editor, Reg Hardware Posted Monday 15th October 2007 15:19 GMT
Re: Re: Flash-back #
By Stu Posted Monday 15th October 2007 15:54 GMT
Forget new drive head technologies... #
By Franklin Posted Monday 15th October 2007 19:48 GMT
@Forget new drive head technologies... #
By Steven Pepperell Posted Monday 15th October 2007 20:28 GMT
Solid state #
By Henry Wertz Posted Monday 15th October 2007 21:38 GMT
Ironic inches #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Monday 15th October 2007 23:05 GMT
Limitz #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 00:25 GMT
Quantum effects #
By ssundell Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 04:42 GMT
Anyone..how far can they go? #
By Chris Donald Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 05:48 GMT
But surely... #
By Alex Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 09:01 GMT
@Chris #
By greg Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 09:55 GMT
Not sure if this is good place #
By Alan Donaly Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 21:53 GMT