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Seagate sends perpendicular drive to market

Michael Kanellos CNET News.com

Published: 17 Jan 2006 08:50 GMT

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Seagate, the largest hard-drive manufacturer in the world, has started to ship its first drive for notebooks based around perpendicular recording techniques, a shift that increases capacity by 25 percent.

The Momentus 5400.3 is a 2.5-inch diameter hard drive, shown off last year, designed for notebooks with a 160GB capacity. The drive relies on perpendicular recording in which the bits are stacked up vertically. This increases the amount of data that can be contained on a single platter. Prices were not released.

The drive makes 5400 revolutions per minute; Seagate will later come out with drives that spin at lower rates (which lowers cost and energy consumption) as well as higher rates for faster data retrieval.

Seagate showed off the drive in June 2005, along with other perpendicular drives. At the time, Seagate said it would release the drive in the winter.

The company will also bring perpendicular recording to its 3.5-inch drives, used in PCs and digital video recorders, as well as 1-inch diameter drives, employed in MP3 players and phones.

Competitors such as Toshiba and Hitachi have already come out or are planning to release perpendicular recording drives for their various markets. The technology will become more prevalent as the year goes on. Drive makers hit on the idea of perpendicular recording a few years ago, but have only started employing the technology on mass-manufactured products.

Hard drive storage density doubles around every 18 months and at times has doubled at an annual rate. The frantic improvement in the technology comes, partly, because of the difficult competitive environment. Often, drive makers lose money, so they are engaged in a constant race to improve their products.

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