10+ Gig Removables? 46
swegerm writes "Well, if you think you're impressed
with the nano magnetics at Cornell - which is years off -
then you'll be even more impressed with the technology that
is here now called "Near Field Recording". The company
TeraStor has developed storage technology that starts at
10 Gig removable on a 5.25 single sided platter for
$700-800 dollars. This will be similar to a CD or Zip
drive. The starting areal density is 10 Giga bits/sq. inch
and approach by the year 2001, 100 Giga bits/sq. inch. The
theoretical maximum is 100,000 Giga bits/sq. inch. It is
based on a combination of optics and magnetic media with
the key solution being in the read/write head. It's
supposed to even exceed GMR technology from IBM. "
Big deal (Score:1)
Castlewood Systems' ORB drive (2GB removable) is another product that could've knocked 'em dead if it had made it to market when the manufacturer said it would (1997). Today, nobody gives a flying fuck about a proprietary 2GB removable format - DVD-RAM is here now and it's an open standard.
SyQuest went into Chapter 11 (Score:1)
(Owner of a p-port SyQuest SparQ talking here)
Doesn't look like tunneling to me.... (Score:1)
ORB Drive already available (Score:1)
Brian
I'm not sure what the big deal is (Score:1)
http://www.onstream.com if you wanna know more.
I have this technology available today! (Score:1)
And... (Score:1)
Long live the 3.5 Floppy!
-- Give him Head? Be a Beacon?
The question is... Why? (Score:1)
And... (Score:1)
And... (Score:1)
The question is... Why? (Score:1)
I want a 200 disc jukebox of these!
30GB Digital Drives For $299 (Score:1)
I'll buy it when I see it (Score:1)
Although it finally made it to market, it's kind of a little too late, don't you think?
In markets that actually support removable media (as in they buy and use them and don't just complain about them), they've kind of "standardized" on CDR for stuff they don't want back and Jaz for stuff they do.
Any new product has to be more than attractively priced to get people to change. It has to be cheap AND have way more features, otherwise it's just a neat novelty.
I have this technology available today! (Score:1)
Removable technology is great, but only if they get the prices down to a reasonable level. I'd much rather buy an ORB drive and get 2.2GB media for $30/shot than 5x more space for 23x the price.
How about this: (Score:1)
I have a PD drive (made by Panasonic, they weren't very popular but you can definitely find the cartridges around).
650 MBs.
Also reads CDs.
Rewritable...
Of course, I haven't gotten it to work in Linux (works fine as a CD-ROM, tho), but it's cool.
Neat (Score:1)
Really cool stuff... (and some uncool stuff) (Score:1)
Mike
--
Really cool stuff... (and some uncool stuff) (Score:1)
-Chris
Big deal (Score:1)
Who cares? People without trust funds. If you don't like it, don't buy it.
Really cool stuff... (Score:1)
As for data limitations, I thought terrastor's process was essentially temperatuer enhanced magnetic field recording. As far as I ever heard (and I admit, I didn't pay too much attention) there was no proof, ever, that what they did was really near field R/W. Perhaps it got fixed. As for the long term use, I think hard-drives still have a few years. There are some technical limits (namely the paramagnetic limit), but terrabyte high speed drives are certainly doable. Anyway, thats my two cents
Really cool stuff... (and some uncool stuff) (Score:1)
how fast are those - replace HDD (Score:1)
But well, even the newest harddisks are not fast and big enough.
SyQuest went into Chapter 11 (Score:1)
Really cool stuff... (and some uncool stuff) (Score:1)
30GB Digital Drives For $299 (Score:1)
And... (Score:1)
Perhaps after a nuclear holocaust they will be the only thing to survive??? Scary!
Really cool stuff... (and some uncool stuff) (Score:1)
how fast are those (Score:1)
VCR (Score:1)
The question is... Why? (Score:1)
Why keeping all our video and audio on a HD when we use them juste sometime?
Why put all your software on 20 CD when you have to reinstall them once a month? (Windowz problem!)
Why not use it to make backup? If it's fast and secure, it's the device we need..
Why....
I want one! (Score:1)
there's enough space for all my MP3 on this disk...!!
How about this: (Score:2)
I have this technology available today! (Score:3)
Each cartridge costs about $300 each new, but are available for much less from eBay (I recently got two of them for $150 each, including shipping and handling fee).
Best of all, no new driver support is needed--simply unmount the disk, power it off with hdparm(8), remove it, and take it with me.
It ways a 1/2 kilo, not much more than a Jaz disk, and holes twice as much. It uses the standard IDE interface, although SCSI models are also available.
No special controller cards are needed: it appears a standard ATAPI DISK or SCSI FIXED device to your IDE or SCSI controller.
I am, of course, talking about 10GB fixed disk, as I've been using since my first date with my PCjx's 10MB sidecar.
Cheers,
Joshua.
The one time I didn't hit preview... (Score:3)
Really cool stuff... (Score:3)
It would seem even without the increase in areal density observed, the techniques involved with flying heads and SIL/Evanescent Coupling would revolutionize removeable media, allowing the speed lower latency of current Winchester media and the durability and reliability of MO media.
I'm not sure myself why crescent shaped domains would aide and increase the areal density; is there some sort of implied overlap between data regions? Is it just a function of tighter packing? Or just smaller domains because of SIL and tighter laser focus/embedded magnetic coils in the flying head?
Why wouldn't this be applicable to current magnetic hard drives then? Because magnetic forces cannot be shaped or focused in a way that optical beams can?
AS
The big deal is... (Score:3)
Current magneto-optical devices are slow because of the head technology, and have relatively low density because of the size of the spot and magnetic domains.
Combining the two allows for the stability of optical data and the density of magnetic storage methods...
Unless you're being sarcastic, you're tape drive won't be of much use for large amounts of data needed to be accessed quickly...
AS