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PC World May 2006 Jon L. Jacobi |
A Faster, Denser Hard Drive Debuts Boost in capacity and performance adds to appeal of perpendicular drives like Seagate's Momentus 5400.3. |
Popular Mechanics January 2010 Tyghe Trimble |
3 Next-Gen Fixes to the Coming Hard-Drive Crisis Hard drives could reach their limits by 2015 unless researchers can find new ways to cram more information onto their disks. |
PC World August 22, 2001 Martyn Williams |
Fujitsu Smashes Hard Disk Density Record New technology could allow notebook computer drives to store more than 100GB of data within the year... |
IEEE Spectrum March 2009 Prachi Patel |
Laser-Heated Hard Drives Could Break Data Density Barrier Scientists at Seagate Technology show that heat-assisted magnetic recording could break the looming terabit-per-square-inch data limit |
PC World May 2005 Eric Dahl |
PC Drive Reaches 500GB Hitachi's new Deskstar 7K500 drive is the first desktop hard drive to reach 500GB, however, new perpendicular recording technology will lead to drives that far surpass it sooner than you think. |
InternetNews March 1, 2006 Hal Glatzer |
Storage Advances in Small Form Factors Sales are booming for the smallest hard-disk drives, as consumer electronics shrink in size. |
PC Magazine October 1, 2010 Matthew Murray |
Will Toshiba's Bit-Patterned Drives Change the HDD Landscape? Toshiba's latest breakthroughs in bit-patterned media promise areal densities of up to 2.5 Tb per square inch -- which could lead to 25TB 3.5-inch drives. |
Technology Research News March 12, 2003 |
Supersensitive disk drives on tap Being able to move electrons from one place to another more efficiently translates to more sensitive electronics that can read information packed more closely on disk drives. New research paves the way for storage devices that hold several thousand gigabits per square inch. Today's hold 50. |
PC World April 8, 2002 Kuriko Miyake |
Toshiba Pushes Hard Disk Density Higher Vendor claims its 60GB drives will hit the highest capacity yet... |
CIO July 15, 2003 John Edwards |
Sensitive Sensors Get those gigs. The State University of New York at Buffalo's Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Department has developed sensors that could boost hard drive capacity by a factor of 1,000 -- without also driving up price. |
PC World June 18, 2001 Sean Captain |
Maxtor Rolls Out 80GB and 100GB Hard Drives Technology stretches single-platter storage from 20GB to 40GB on new DiamondMax drive... |
PC Magazine May 17, 2006 Sebastian Rupley |
More Gigs Seagate Technology has finally brought its perpendicular recording technology into the desktop drive market. |
Technology Research News March 26, 2003 |
Rubber stamp writes data Scientists from IBM's Almaden research center have found a way to quickly transfer information from a magnetic mask to a magnetic disk. The method promises to make it considerably quicker to format and copy magnetic media in bulk. |
Technology Research News February 25, 2004 |
Hot tip boosts disk capacity Many research efforts are aimed at increasing the amount of information that can be stored in a given area of magnetic media like computer disks. One challenge is making smaller magnetic bits that are stable at room temperature. |
PC World September 2001 Sean Captain |
Hard Drives: 100GB & Larger Desktop drives have reached 100GB, and larger models are waiting in the wings, but technical limits stand in the way... |
PC Magazine August 16, 2006 |
Bits & Bites v25n15 Seagate is demonstrating Heat-Assisted Magnetic Recording (HAMR) technology. |
InternetNews June 9, 2005 Jim Wagner |
Seagate Hits 160G For Notebooks Hard drive manufacturer Seagate Technology plans to ship the first notebook drives using perpendicular recording technology. |
PC Magazine October 11, 2006 |
Terabits In The Vortex Consider a hard drive that can store thousands of movies per square inch. Is it possible? |
InternetNews May 16, 2006 Clint Boulton |
IBM Shatters Tape Density Mark Researchers at IBM's Almaden Research Center in San Jose, Calif., packed data onto a test tape at a density of 6.67 billion bits, or more than 6 terabytes, per square inch. |
InternetNews January 18, 2006 Clint Boulton |
Seagate Ships Powerful Notebook Drive Top hard drive maker Seagate Technology said it has begun shipping the first 2.5-inch notebook PC disk drive built on the new perpendicular recording technology. |
PC Magazine August 16, 2006 John C. Dvorak |
Inside Track v25n15 Over the past 50 years, the amount of data that can be crammed onto one inch of disk space has increased by a factor of 50 million. Now that's something to celebrate on the hard drive's 50th birthday. |
Technology Research News November 3, 2004 |
Square Rings Promise Reliable MRAM Researchers are working on magnetic random access memory chips that hold as much data as standard electronic memory chips. The key to a promising design is a nanowire bent into a circle. |
Technology Research News July 2, 2003 |
Material helps bits beat heat Researchers have discovered a way to shore up magnetic energy that promises bits only a few nanometers across -- the span of a few dozen hydrogen atoms. The method could make it possible to store more than a trillion bits per square inch, according to the researchers. |
PC Magazine June 21, 2006 |
Data Cram IBM researchers set new world record by storing 6.67 billion bits of data per square inch of magnetic tape. |
RootPrompt.org May 24, 2000 Peter Gutmann |
Secure Deletion of Data With the use of increasingly sophisticated encryption systems, an attacker wishing to gain access to sensitive data is forced to look elsewhere for information.... |
Technology Research News October 17, 2005 |
Data storage technologies Today's magnetic disk drives could be improved by incorporating much larger magnetoresistance or replaced by microelectromechanical systems (MEMS), near-field optics, holographic systems, or even molecules for better data storage solutions. |
PC Magazine July 13, 2005 Sebastian Rupley |
500GB Notebook Drives? Long-awaited perpendicular recording technology is on its way. The new recording technology should quickly bring large increases in drive capacity. |
InternetNews January 4, 2008 Judy Mottl |
Victory For Flash as Hitachi Cans Tiny Hard Disks Hitachi is kissing production of its smallest hard drive disks goodbye, citing poor sales and the increasing shift to flash technology when it comes to demand for mobile device storage. |
InternetNews January 28, 2008 Gene Hirschel |
Seagate And The Storage Spiral Seagate recently launched a solid-state, all Flash drive in its storage offerings. |
InternetNews June 16, 2005 Henry Newman |
Why Tape Won't Die Issues such as cost, capacity, power, portability and bandwidth will ensure that tape continues to be a reasonable storage alternative to disk. |
The Motley Fool July 12, 2005 Dan Bloom |
Seagate's (Hard) Driving Storage The company is first to release a hard drive based on perpendicular recording. |
PC Magazine April 4, 2007 John Brandon |
The Future of Storage Keeping all the information we're accumulating will take a herculean storage drive. |
Scientific American March 2006 Mark Fischetti |
Spin and Swing Portable consumer products such as music players, cameras and cell phones are becoming ever smaller. Miniaturized electronics deserve some of the credit, but so do ever shrinking motors. |
PC World August 2006 Melissa J. Perenson |
Internal 750GB Drive From Seagate Is Big, Fast It's the first 3.5-inch hard drive to use perpendicular magnetic recording technology. |
The Motley Fool June 29, 2006 Dan Bloom |
The Case for Hard Drives Hard drive manufacturers have bright futures and tempting prices. Investors, take note. |
Technology Research News November 5, 2003 |
Electrons spin magnetic fields Spintronics researchers are looking for ways to control and use electron spin. Researchers from Cornell University and Yale University have brought the field a step forward by showing that a flow of electrons that all have the same spin can transfer angular momentum to magnetic material. |
Chemistry World October 9, 2007 Richard Van Noorden |
Science Behind Your Hard Drive Scoops Physics Nobel The 2007 Nobel Prize in Physics has been awarded to Frenchman Albert Fert and German Peter Grunberg, for their discovery of giant magnetoresistance. |
InternetNews July 5, 2007 Andy Patrizio |
Is Laser The Solution For Hard Drive I/O? Dutch researchers say they can write data up to 100 times faster than current technology, but that's a long way away and may not be the best solution. |
InternetNews July 23, 2010 |
What Keeps SSD From Replacing Spinning Disks Flash is faster, cooler and uses less power, but there's one little problem that keeps it from ever really replacing spinning disks. |
Technology Research News January 1, 2003 Kimberly Patch |
Aligned fields could speed storage Researchers from three institutes in Germany and Russia have found a material whose electric and magnetic domains line up together. The work could bring together the currently separate fields of magnetic and electronic data storage, which would give both methods more flexibility. |
Technology Research News July 30, 2003 |
See-through magnets hang tough Researchers from the Independent University of Barcelona (UAB) and the University of Zaragoza in Spain have found a way to form transparent, durable, lightweight magnets that maintain their magnetism in magnetic fields and high temperatures. |
Technology Research News December 31, 2003 |
Shape key to strong sensors Researchers have found a possible explanation for why a pair of semiconducting compounds -- mixes of silver and selenium or tellurium -- are strong magnetic sensors over a wide range of magnetic field strengths. |
InternetNews June 25, 2007 Paul Shread |
Call/Recall Pushes Optical Limits A private company with roots in Bell Labs hopes to put optical storage on the enterprise map with new technology that squeezes 1TB on a single disk and offers transfer rates that compete with hard disk drives. |
Technology Research News March 9, 2005 |
Avalanches up Disk Storage Researchers have constructed a spin-valve transistor that is more sensitive to microscopic magnetic fields than the devices that read today's commercial hard drives. |
Reactive Reports December 2003 David Bradley |
Airy magnets Spanish researchers have created a new type of magnetic material that is ultra-light and transparent. The airy magnets could have applications in flat screen displays and magneto-optical memory devices for computers. |
Chemistry World July 20, 2012 Simon Hadlington |
New type of chemical bond around dwarf stars The work, led by Trygve Helgaker at the University of Oslo in Norway, not only provides insights into fundamental aspects of electronic interactions with magnetic fields, but also sheds light on the exotic chemistry that exists in stellar environments. |
The Motley Fool December 24, 2010 Balachander Suriyanarayanan |
IBM's "Racetrack" Closer to Starting Its Engine A memory technology that could enable a handheld device like an MP3 player to store about 3,500 movies or 500,000 songs is a step closer to commercial viability, researchers at IBM say. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics December 2005 Ben Ames |
Military storage designers call for hard drives Disk drives are still getting denser-slowly-but they easily outstrip solid-state for price and capacity. |
PC Magazine October 11, 2006 |
Defragment Floppy Disks Windows XP Disk Defragmenter won't handle a floppy disk. |
InternetNews August 9, 2007 Henry Newman |
Xbox, PS3 and Wii: The Future of Storage Just like the PC dominated the 1990s, gaming will become the dominant technology of the future. |