Toshiba - 31.5 Gb per square inch
  06/25/2001 5:25:25 PM MDT Albuquerque, Nm
  By Dustin D. Brand; Owner AMO
Not as astounding as a few terrabytes in the size of a hologram sugarcube, 31.5Gb per sqare inch is good for laptops.
Toshiba announced today a lineup of hard disk drives for notebook computers that enabled more data than ever into a square inch of disk space.
The new drives have an areal density of 35.1Gb per square inch (or 35.1 Giga Bits), which equates to 20GB (Giga Bytes / 1 Byte = 8 bits) of data on each 2.5-inch platter. Toshiba's highest-capacity 2.5-inch drives to date had an areal density of 26.7Gb per square inch, for a single platter capacity of 15GB. Those devices began shipping in January this year.
Toshiba's drives are state-of-the-art. Earlier this month Seagate Technology announced new drives with what the company claimed was a record-beating areal density of 32.6Gb per square inch. IBM has managed to achieve densities of 25.7Gb per square inch on commercial products, although it recently announced development of a new magnetic coating that it expects will push densities to 100Gb per square inch by 2003.
Toshiba announced four drive models on Monday. There are one- and two-platter versions of drives using fluid dynamic bearing (FDB) or ball bearing (BB) motors. The drives have a maximum rotational speed of 4,200 rpm, data transfer rate of 100MBps, average seek time of 12 milliseconds and 13 milliseconds for the FDB- and BB-based drives, respectively. The one-platter versions weigh 95 grams and the two-platter models 99 grams.
Mass production will begin in July, Toshiba said. Pricing details were not announced.
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