gadgetPhreak Gadget News Blog. Futuristic Gadgets and Portable Electronics

October 11, 2006

Maxtor expands options in Shared Storage, OneTouch lineup

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It looks like Western Digital isn’t the only hard drive firm broadening the horizons of its oh-so-popular external lineup, as Maxtor has announced today a trio of revamped devices sporting the same technologies (and less-than-sexy enclosures) we’ve come to expect, but also gain welcome upgrades in the file space department. The company’s flagship unit, the OneTouch III Turbo Edition, now tips the scales at 1.5TB, and still touts the same “user-configurable RAID,” automatic backup scheduling, “System Rollback,” USB 2.0 connectivity, and DriveLock software to protect your precious information (or priceless game saves) from the grimey hands of data thieves; meanwhile, the non-Turbo edition now comes in a 750GB single-drive flavor, while the Mini tops out at 160GB. Rather than cramming more space into its Shared Storage II drives, Maxtor now offers single-drive versions in 320GB and half-terabyte sizes, and includes software to facilitate “easy backup scheduling between networked computers,” detailed storage status to all connected users, and a pair of USB 2.0 ports. If you’re just too occupied to schedule your own backups, or just need a less expensive alternative to an in-home NAS, Maxtor’s refreshed offerings will have you covered later this month.

[Via eHomeUpgrade]

 

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September 8, 2006

Iomega rolls out OS X-ready UltraMax 640GB RAID drive

Filed under: Apple,HardDrive,MacPro,UltraMax,hard drive,iomega,mac pro,os x,osx,raid — Darren Murph @ 12:13 am

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Iomega must really like making hard drives aimed at Apple users, or either its MiniMax for the Mac mini and the new UltraMax 640GB drive are completely coincidental. Whatever the case, this new 640GB HDD rocks dual 320GB SATA drives in a RAID 0 or 1 array, and sports an enclosure that any Mac Pro (or PowerMac G5) owner can appreciate. It comes formatted for OS X use (HFS+), but can be reformatted for PC use, and Iomega apparently made cross-platform setup a breeze with the included “FAT32 format tools.” (What, no NTFS?) What differentiates this cheese grater drive from those lookalikes is its on-the-fly ability to turn RAID on and off, as well as offering a few more nifty options not typically found on external drives. Aside from the trifecta of USB 2.0, FireWire 400, and FireWire 800 connections, you get a manual RAID switch that allows you to turn off the RAID and use the drives as JBOD (i.e. where each HDD is treated with its own drive letter). If you’ve been hunting for flexible external storage options, and you’re a huge fan of brushed metal, the UltraMax 640GB can get paired up with your Mac (or PC) for $449.95 later this month.

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August 14, 2006

Seagate hoping to get 60GB and 120GB drives into iPods

Filed under: Apple,Apple iPod,AppleIpod,HardDrive,capacity,hard drive,iPod,seagate — Darren Murph @ 4:20 pm

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If you haven’t been paying close attention to the theoretical glass ceiling that the iPod has struck, you may not realize that Apple’s darling has been capped at 60GB for quite awhile now. While the iPod with video is, in our humble opinion, very ripe for a refresh, the holdup could be history if Seagate has anything to do with it. The world’s “largest hard drive manufacturer” isn’t phased by the recent flash-based memory craze, and feels that even NAND can’t oust the tried and true storage platters on its own. William Watkins, the company’s CEO, recently stated that he felt quite secure in his operations, and that while flash memory had its place, consumers needing spacious drives for backup and home / vehicle media storage will be skipping over the small stuff and heading straight for the hard drives. Regardless, recent analyst reactions to the less-than-stellar financial performance from the company has sparked questions about how it plans to stage a comeback in a flash-driven world, and the answer just might be the iPod. Watkins noted that Seagate hasn’t been competitive in the high-capacity 1.8-inch drive arena, but we latched onto a certain comment regarding his intentions to change that — in regards to 60GB and 120GB 1.8-inch drives, Watkins claimed that the company “will have one in the December quarter,” which is obviously prime fodder for new iPod speculation (you know, since that’s the holiday shopping season and all). While we weren’t told outright that Seagate was in line to supply Apple with these larger drives, we sure hope somebody hooks it up with more capacity, and besides, there’s never a time like the present to crank up the rarely-stagnant Apple rumor mill once again.

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July 3, 2006

RCA’s H116 6GB DAP reviewed

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Considering that exactly zero people were interested enough in the new hard drive-based RCA MP3 players we brought you last week to actually leave a comment, we doubt that even a glowing review from Cnet would convince you to pick up one of these models — but that’s a moot point, because Cnet really doesn’t have many positive things to say about the 6GB H116 they put through its paces. As you’ll recall, RCA is clearly targeting the low-end of the market with its new DAPs, as evidenced by their black-and-white screens, rather generic-looking designs, and most tellingly, their complete lack of extra features that might sway folks away from the iTatorship. In fact, the only real compliment Cnet is able to muster about their unit is the fact that it does what it advertises: play music — but not very well it seems. Combined with the buggy controls and poor quality of the FM transmitter, the sub-par audio would seem to indicate that even for the low-low price of $170, you’re still not getting what you pay for.

[Thanks, Jen B.]

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July 1, 2006

Seagate’s leaking hard drives for 10x the fun

Filed under: HardDrive,drive,hard drive,lubricant,nanotube,seagate — Paul Miller @ 5:05 am

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The wild and wacky frontier of hard drive technology is always full of surprising new ways to keep those drive capacities growing, and this new patent for leaking nanotube-housed lubricant onto disc platters is no exception. Apparently, a heated hard disc is capable of cramming more data into closer quarters, but the method hasn't been implemented in current drives since the heat evaporates the lubricant that allows the recording head to travel smoothly over the disc, causing a fatal disc crash. Seagate's new patent addresses the issue by storing lubricant in a special material made from millions of carbon nanotubes and embedded in the drive housing. As the disc spins, lubricant is slowly leaked out, and the disc can be kept safe for its whole lifetime. The upshot of all this is that Seagate can use the heat-assisted recording to cram several terabits per square inch into a drive -- 10 times as much data into the disc than is currently possible. We guess there'll be a bit of a wait for this to make it to market, but we greatly look forward to an educational video on the subject all the same.

[Via New Scientist]
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Seagate’s leaking hard drives for 10x the fun

Filed under: HardDrive,drive,hard drive,lubricant,nanotube,seagate — Paul Miller @ 1:05 am

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The wild and wacky frontier of hard drive technology is always full of surprising new ways to keep those drive capacities growing, and this new patent for leaking nanotube-housed lubricant onto disc platters is no exception. Apparently, a heated hard disc is capable of cramming more data into closer quarters, but the method hasn't been implemented in current drives since the heat evaporates the lubricant that allows the recording head to travel smoothly over the disc, causing a fatal disc crash. Seagate's new patent addresses the issue by storing lubricant in a special material made from millions of carbon nanotubes and embedded in the drive housing. As the disc spins, lubricant is slowly leaked out, and the disc can be kept safe for its whole lifetime. The upshot of all this is that Seagate can use the heat-assisted recording to cram several terabits per square inch into a drive -- 10 times as much data into the disc than is currently possible. We guess there'll be a bit of a wait for this to make it to market, but we greatly look forward to an educational video on the subject all the same.

[Via New Scientist]
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June 30, 2006

Military-grade “Guard Dog” hard drive degausser

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When even a $13,000 hard drive degausser leaves you a little worried that someone, somehow might still be able to pick out a few bits of top secret data, you might want to turn to these guys at the Georgia Tech Research Institute, who developed a fool-proof drive destroyer dubbed the “Guard Dog” that works without electricity. Like most drive wiping devices, the Guard Dog employs massively powerful magnets that not only render hard drives useless, but VHS tapes, DAT tapes, ZIP drives, and any other magnetic media to boot. Of course, they didn’t just use any old off the shelf magnet, instead designing custom neodymium iron-boron models that produce just the right magnetic field necessary to make that hard drive completely useless. The Guard Dog also speeds things up by letting you crank drives through a mechanism that’ll wipe them as they pass through, even if they’re enclosed in metal cases. The system was developed in conjunction with defense contractor L-3 Communications Corp who foresees producing hundreds or thousands of the devices for both government agencies and private companies, but probably not for individual use — if you know how much 125 pounds of neodymium magnets cost, you’ll know why.

[Via Digital World Tokyo]

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June 8, 2006

SimpleTech external HDDs designed by Pininfarina

Filed under: HardDrive,Usb2.0,hard drive,pininfarina,simpletech,usb 2.0 — Paul Miller @ 7:30 pm

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We’ve never really felt the specific urge to have the plastic casing that houses our data be designed by a company like Pininfarina — the same people who designed cars such as the Ferrari 575M Maranello, Jaguar XJ-S and Volvo C70. If, however, such design standards strike your fancy, SimpleTech is offering up some portable USB 2.0 drives that could do the trick. They range from the $110 40GB version to the $180 100GB version, and all spin their disks at 5400RPM with 8MB of cache.

[Via The Gadget Weblog]

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June 7, 2006

SavitMicro’s Dueple: HD media player with DVD

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We've seen Korean manufacturer SavitMicro a few times before, once with a hub for multi-cam recording and another time with a media-playing drive enclosure, and now they've popped up once again at Computex with yet another device that promises to simplify your digital life. Like their drive enclosure, the new "Dueple," as it's known, also accepts swappable 2.5-inch or 3.5-inch drives for multimedia playback, but throws in a DVD player as well for spinning any of those old-fashioned discs you may have laying around. The Dueple features DVI, component, S-video, coax, and digital audio outputs for hooking up to your home theater gear, Ethernet and USB ports for data transfer, and lets you watch/listen to MPEG-1/2/4, MP3, DivX, WMV, WMA, and OGG files, including high-definition content. There are probably better ways of getting your digital swag onto a TV than this particular solution, but if it sports a reasonable pricetag when it comes out within the month -- from e-tailer GeekStuff4U -- we imagine that it will draw some interest.
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May 14, 2006

Lower-end PS3 to ship with wired controllers, non-upgradeable HDD?

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Besides the disheartening news that the cheaper version of the PlayStation 3 will lack WiFi, a memory card reader, and mosty significantly, an HDMI port, we've now learned that the $500 PS3 may also be shipping with wired, and not wireless, versions of that rumble-less, Wii-like controller. While adding separate Bluetooth controllers would only set you back a few bucks -- if, in fact, the lower-end model actually ends up shipping with BT functionality -- boosting your console's storage capacity in the future may be a non-starter, as Sony reps supposedly told Games Radar that the 20GB hard drive isn't upgradeable. With so many significant differences between the two configurations (and let's not forget the snazzy metallic lettering you get on the $600 models), it's not clear how many consumers are going to agree with Sony's Kaz Hirai that the "crippled" version of the console is a "good value" for them.

[Thanks, J and Ameya T.]
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May 9, 2006

Breakthrough in ferroelectric materials could enable million-GB thumbdrives

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While we have to agree with certain Engadget readers who feel that 640KB of RAM is plenty for most computing tasks, those darn scientists just keep looking for ways to stuff more and more data into smaller spaces. The latest breakthrough on the storage tip comes courtesy of researchers from Drexel and Penn, who have found a way to stabilize the simple physical property of ferroelectricity at the nano scale, making possible such obviously unnecessary densities as 12,800,000GB per cubic centimeter. Ferroelectric materials are usable as memory because they possess the ability to switch electric charges in so-called dipole moments, but before Drexel's Dr. Jonathan Spanier and colleagues decided to embed the materials in water, it had previously been impossible to screen those dipole moments at scales small enough to be useful. Don't expect to be able to buy a zillion gig, water-filled iPod anytime soon, though, as the research team still faces significant hurdles in actually assembling the nanowires that would make up such a drive with the proper density as well as developing a method of efficiently reading and writing data.
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May 2, 2006

Cowon’s 4GB iAudio6 DAP reviewed

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Cowon’s gotten
some rather mixed reviews in the past for their line of iAudio
DAPs, but the outlook seems mostly positive for the upcoming hard drive-based href="http://www.engadget.com/2006/01/03/cowons-new-iaudio-6-goes-0-85-inch/">iAudio6, with Anything But iPod
finding very few flaws in the diminutive player’s design, features, or performance. Especially impressive is the
1.3-inch OLED screen, which gets high marks for both color depth and clarity — ABi calls it “simply
brilliant” — and makes watching XviD-encoded movies almost bearable on such a small display. The iAudio6, which
we first spotted at CES, can handle
up to 4GB of MP3, WMA, OGG, FLAC, or WAV-encoded tracks on its .85-inch drive, but it’s the drive that leads to one of
the few knocks on this model, which is a noticeable lag time between operations. Other nice features include USB host
capability for device-to-device file transfer with other UMS-enabled hardware, software that automatically tags certain
tunes with the corresponding lyrics, line-in and voice recording, and surprisingly powerful output that can drive even
large headphones. If you don’t mind a bit of a delay when recording or changing tracks, or a bit of eye strain when
watching your flicks, then the iAudio6 sounds like it’ll make for a solid purchase whenever it becomes available
Stateside.

[Thanks, James]

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April 28, 2006

Seagate’s 750GB Pushbutton Back-up Hard Drive

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border="0" align="right" src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/seagate750gb.jpg" alt="" />We’d heard it, it href="http://www.engadget.com/2006/04/21/seagate-leaks-750gb-barracuda-7200-10/">leaked, it got href="http://www.engadget.com/2006/04/27/seagates-barracuda-750gb-drive-reviewed/">reviewed, then announced, now
it’s time to get your 750GB perp drives on people. Seagate‘s new 750GB
Pushbutton Back-up Hard Drive isn’t by an means out of the ordinary — it’s an external drive with USB 2.0 and FireWire,
the only difference is it’s 750GB in a single drive, not two drive in href="http://www.engadget.com/search/?q=raid">RAID 0. For what you’re getting the $559 doesn’t even really seem
that out of control, and you’ll have your chance to get one starting next month, according to Seagate. We’re not going
to ask what the hell kind of data you’ve got that requires you to go buy a 750GB drive (or a couple of ‘em for an
array, as it were), but copious storage early adopters, we tip our hats to you.

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April 20, 2006

Seagate leaks 750GB Barracuda 7200.10

Filed under: 750gb,HDD,HardDrive,barracuda,drive,hard drive,sata,seagate — Ryan Block @ 9:35 pm

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Well, it's been a rather long year or so since 500GB drives came into style as the standard for high end disks, but it looks like perpendicular recording will save the day in stagnant storage. Seagate's inadvertently leaked the Barracuda 7200.10 line of SATA drives with speeds up to 3GBps (SATA II), 7200rpm, 4.16ms latency, NCQ, 16MB cache, and 750GB of storage. 750 freaking gigs, man. Just another step on the magic road to a 1 terabyte petabyte drive though, you know? [Warning: PDF link]

[Via DailyTech, thanks, Diego]
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April 2, 2006

Nintendo Revolution to have SD slot and USB for external drives

Filed under: Gaming,HardDrive,Nintendo,drives,games,go,hard drive,iwata,revolution,sd,storage — Ryan Block @ 7:01 pm

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revolutionIf, like us, you were curious as to how Nintendo's expectedly hard drive-free Revolution was going to be able to compete with Sony's and Microsoft's drive-toting next-gen consoles, let your fears be allayed. In a recent CNN Money interview with Iwata-san, the N-man divulged that the Rev would come with an SD slot to complement its 512MB internal flash memory (for, you know, downloading games n' stuff), but that it'd also have USB ports for external storage solutions, like flash drives and hard drives. That's not going to be a huge boon if the Rev isn't going to have crazy media features like the 360 has and the PS3 is expected to, but it's still nice to know we're not gonna be left in the lurch on the storage thing.

[Via Joystiq and PSFK]
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