Interview: Bigfoot's Killer NIC, Exposed
Since its release, the Killer NIC has garnered a reputation for being an extravagant and largely unnecessary add-on for the do-it-yourselfer. Seeking additional insight, we approached the card's designer. Read More
- X Prize, Google Set On 10 Teams In $30 Million Race To Moon
- VIDEO: We Love Our New Skulltrail
- Forget Terascale. Here Comes Exascale Computing.
- Gates Sees Diminished Role For Keyboards
- New Lufthansa Flight Computer Saves Tons Of Fuel
- Intel To Add More Entry-level CPUs To Santa Rosa Platform; SFF...
- DVD Formats Expected To Remain Optical Storage Mainstream Over Next...
- SSD Expected To Make Stronger Showing In Handheld Devices Than...
- Optimus LED Keyboard Shipping
- 504 TFlops 'Ranger' Supercomputer Now In Operation
-
Samsung 500 GB Notebook Hard Drive
-
hard drive notebook
-
500 GB notebook drive
-
FUJITSU 2 5 HARD DRIVE
-
Fujitsu 160GB External Hard Drive
-
500 gb hard drive review
-
500 GB IDE hard drive
-
Fujitsu 160GB Portable External Hard Drive
-
notebook hard drive
-
500 GB IDE HARD DISK DRIVE
-
seagate 500 gb external hard drive
-
320 GB notebook hard drive
Fujitsu Announces 500 GB Notebook Hard Drive
Source: Tom's Hardware US – Category : Miscellaneous 0 comment
Sunnyvale (CA) - Terabyte notebooks could be hitting the market at the end of the second quarter of this year as Fujitsu is preparing to roll out the first 500 GB 2.5" mainstream hard drives.
The company's MHZ2 BT drives are scheduled to begin shipping in May and target desktop PCs, notebooks, digital video recorders (DVR), and external hard drives. Initially, the 4200 rpm drives will be available in versions with 400 GB and 500 GB and will appeal to users who simply need lots of storage space in a compact form factor, without a particular need of speedy read and write performance.
Fujitsu claims that the MHZ2 BT, which will be available with SATA and SATA II interfaces, consumes about 1.8 watts during read/write processes, which is at the low-end of its class, but about 25% higher than 2.5" solid state disk drives, which typically consume about 1.4 - 1.5 watts under load. According to the manufacturer, the new hard drive is rated at an idle power consumption of 0.5 watts; in stand-by mode, the drive consumes about 0.13 watts.
While these new hard drives won't deliver very fast data transfers, they certainly increase the distance to the still expensive SSDs - which are currently selling in the $700-$800 range for 64 GB. The 500 GB model may be especially interesting for small form factor PCs as well as desktop replacement notebooks and mobile workstations, which now extend their storage space to up to 1.5 TB, for example in Eurocom's Phantom D90xC.
-
Previous News Article
Intel Planning Large Drops In Old... -
Next News Article
Intel Six-core Coming In 2008
React! Return to news index