Yesterday, Western Digital announced a one-terabyte hard drive for notebook computers.
The WD Scorpio Blue SATA 2.5-inch hard drive — 12.5 mm, 5200 RPM, 1TB, $249 — blows my mind. It was only in April 2007 that the industry first saw a one-terabyte desktop drive in the 3.5-inch format. (Andrew Binstock and I had a wager whether we'd see one by the end of 2006. He lost.)
Only one week ago, I put a 1.5TB Seagate 3.5-inch drive into an old iMac. And now you can put a 1TB drive into a standard notebook or a server blade.
Western Digital also offers a USB-connected external version you can put into a briefcase, pocketbook or pocket for $299. And I thought my 500GB external drive (also from Western Digital) was impressive.
Once upon a time, a terabyte was a lot of storage. I remember how excited I was after adding up all the drives in all the servers in my test lab, and realizing that there was more than a terabyte there. And now you can put that much into your notebook, or your pocket. Wow.
7.28.2009
Put a terabyte in your pocket
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Alan Zeichick
at
2:31 PM
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About Me
- Alan Zeichick
- Co-founder and editorial director of BZ Media, which publishes SD Times, the leading magazine for the software development industry. Founder of SPTechCon: The SharePoint Technology Conference, AnDevCon: the Android Developer Conference, and iPhone/iPad DevCon. Also president and principal analyst of Camden Associates, an IT consulting and analyst firm.
2 comments:
Yeah, I remember the old days of Teradata. Big news back in the late 80's/early 90's.
Back in the 80s, I saw an XT with a 10MB hard drive and asked out loud, "Who the heck would ever need so much storage?" Clearly, I wasn't cut out to be a futurist...
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