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Memorex intros "smallest" 4 GByte USB harddriveSep 16, 2005 - in News
Memorex expanded its Traveldrive pocket storage family with what the firm claims is the smallest USB Flash drive currently available on the market. For about the same price than a 2 GByte USB Flash drive, the "Mega Traveldrive" offers twice the capacity and competes with established products such as Seagate's ST1 drive.
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100 GByte storage for your cell phone?Sep 13, 2005 - in News
British nanotechnologists have emulated the functions usually associated with transistor-based digital electronics in all-metallic nanoscale devices made from ferromagnetic materials.
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Samsung builds foundation for 32 GByte Flash cardsSep 11, 2005 - in News
Samsung claims it is first to have developed a 16 Gbit NAND Flash memory chip. Built in a 50 nm process, the device sets a new record in the storage density race and could enable memory cards with up to 32 GByte capacity.
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Can Gigabyte's i-RAM Replace Existing Hard Drives?Sep 7, 2005 - in Reviews
Connected via serial ATA and equipped with up to 4 GB of DDR memory, the i-RAM plug-in module from Gigabyte is supposed to open up the way to undreamt-of hard disk performance.
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Hitachi GST to start volume shipments of Mikey microdrives in 4QSep 7, 2005 - in News
Hitachi Global Storage Technologies (Hitachi GST) is expected to start volume shipments of its new-generation of microdrives, codenamed Mikey, in the fourth quarter of this year, according to Morse Chen, general manager for Hitachi GST Taiwan and Shanghai.
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Maxtos intros 500 GByte external network and media storageSep 2, 2005 - in News
Maxtor launched a new external network storage device named Shared Storage Plus.
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Hitachi thinks small with new 8 GByte microdriveSep 2, 2005 - in News
Hitachi today introduced a new generation of its smallest form factor harddrives. Mikey, the firm's 1" microdrive is now available in capacities of up to 8 GByte and claims to be the first harddrive to offer a CE-ATA interface, which is widely promoted to spread among consumer electronics devices. There are also new 30 and 60 GByte slim versions of Hitachi's 1.8" Travelstar series.
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Hard Disk Drive Video Players Hit The MainstreamAug 29, 2005 - in Reviews
Until now, DVD players with DivX support have been a good alternative to the noisy living room PC. Now the first multimedia boxes based on hard drives have arrived. They can store hundreds of gigabytes of video and play it directly from the hard drive, yet are hardly bigger than a paperback novel.
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Speedy Notebook Storage with Seagate's latest Momentus DriveAug 22, 2005 - in Reviews
Seagate's new Momentus allows notebooks to be equipped with hard disks featuring up to 120 GB of capacity while setting new records for transfer rates and access times. We test both versions: Serial ATA and UltraATA/100.
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Seagate increases lead in harddrive marketAug 18, 2005 - in News
In a quarter with unusually high demand for storage products, Seagate was able to capitalize on the trend and expanded its lead over the competition, iSuppli reports. The Scotts Valley, Calif., based company now builds almost one in every three harddrives sold around the globe.
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Accelerated Compact Flash: The Addonics SATA CF AdapterAug 18, 2005 - in Reviews
This flash card reader promises high performance thanks to the use of a fast SATA port. The manufacturer includes a complete mounting kit with the package. We test it to see how it compares to traditional CF card readers.
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Toshiba ships first harddrive with perpendicular recording techAug 16, 2005 - in News
Toshiba claims it has won the race of bringing the first PMR harddrive to the market. PMR, short for perpendicular magnetic recording, is believed to increase the capacity of harddrives substantially: Toshiba's first PMR device is a single platter 1.8" model with a storage density of 133 Gbit per square inch.
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Seagate ships 400 GByte nearline SATA harddrivesAug 15, 2005 - in News
Seagate today announced that it has begun shipping nearline SATA drives that are designed to fill the gap between online and offline enterprise storage. The company claims that the new NL35 are more reliable than desktop drives, while offering a lower-priced enterprise storage solution for applications such as disc-to-disc backup, archive, and tiered storage.
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Two Fast and Functional USB Flash DrivesAug 10, 2005 - in Reviews
Memina elicits superlatives with its record-shattering Rocket 4 GB USB flash drive. Kingston counters with its DataTraveller II Plus Migo Edition, which carries your e-mail and Windows installation files around and imports them onto other desktops. Which is better, and why?
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When Size Really Matters: Smallest Flash CardsAug 5, 2005 - in Reviews
You can find CompactFlash memory cards today with capacities of up to 8 GB, and 4 GB Secure Digital flash (SD) cards are just around the corner. While rather small, their size still makes them unsuitable for use in ultra-small devices like cellphones, smart phones, PDAs, and so forth. Here, we take a look at smaller memory formats, including MMCmicro and MicroSD, which promise mass data storage in truly tiny packages.
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External Hard Drives with Trimmings AplentyAug 4, 2005 - in Reviews
External hard drive capacities continue to grow and their prices certainly don't break the bank. Now, vendors such as Fastora, Maxtor and Smartdisk are designing in value-added features that make these devices that much more exciting.
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Siggraph 2005: Texas Memory Systems shows 32 GByte solid state storage systemAug 3, 2005 - in News
At the annual Siggraph convention held in Los Angeles, Texas Memory Systems demonstrated a solid state (all RAM) storage unit that promises to blow away traditional hard-drives, both in performance and price. The unit dubbed the RamSan-400 holds 32 to 128 GByte of RAM and can sustain 3 GByte per second transfer rates. Starting Price is steep at around $65,000.
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Storage enclosure packs four 2.5" harddrives into one 5.25" bayAug 1, 2005 - in News
Fujitsu announced that Enhance Technology will use the firm's next-gen SATA harddrives in the QuadraPack 14, storage enclosure that can house up to four 2.5" Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) or Serial ATA (SATA) harddrives mounted into a single 5.25" drive bay.
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Iomega posts $6.7 million loss, realigns product strategyJul 28, 2005 - in News
As expected storage specialist Iomega posted another quarterly loss, amounting to $6.7 million on revenues of $65.7 million for the second quarter of this year.
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EMC makes massive array officialJul 25, 2005 - in News
EMC formally launched its newest high-end storage array, a tiered storage box that can store one petaByte (define) of data and help customers move files from smaller systems onto one machine.
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Desktop Datastore: Accusys Acuta 4SJul 25, 2005 - in Reviews
Providing a RAID array containing up to four SATA hard disks, the Acuta 4S is designed to meet the storage needs of small businesses.
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Hitachi's 500 GB DeskStar MonsterJul 14, 2005 - in Reviews
Hitachi has become the first hard drive vendor to offer 500 GB of capacity. But while coming out on top in the size superlative, the DeskStar 7K500's heat dissipation and other performance factors might involve some compromises.
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Small or Smaller? Ultraportable Hard DisksJul 12, 2005 - in Reviews
Seagate puts its top 2.5" portable hard drive model into the running, and Transcend counters with an even smaller, ultraportable offering based on a 1.8" hard drive. Which product makes the most sense?
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Prodisc to launch 4.9 GByte DVD discsJul 6, 2005 - in News
Prodisc Technology has developed 8x DVD-R discs with a storage capacity of 4.9 GByte, 200 MByte larger than standard 4.7 GB discs, the company pointed out.
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LightScribe: Professional Labels in Your DVD Recorder!Jul 1, 2005 - in Reviews
With little left to differentiate DVD recorders, manufacturers are looking for new ways of staying ahead of their competitors. One such novelty is LightScribe, which lets a recorder actually label the CD or DVD directly. You can produce professional-style labels using the same laser that burns data, right inside your own CD/DVD drive! Is it worth it? Read on to find out.
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Hard drives go mobile: Q&A with Hitachi GSTJun 28, 2005 - in News
The success of the Apple iPod has brought home to a mass market that hard disk drives are now considered a viable form of portable mass storage.
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Quanta Storage moves into CE marketJun 23, 2005 - in News
Quanta Storage, the largest manufacturer of slim-type optical disc drives (ODDs) in Taiwan, has extended its production to consumer electronics (CE), and will initially focus on portable and car-use DVD players, according to the company.
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Internet Archive stores 40 billion web pagesJun 22, 2005 - in News
Storage provider Capricorn said that it has installed a total of 1.5 PetaByte (PByte) of storage space for the Internet Archive, best known for its "Wayback Machine".
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FirstWare Recover Pro 2004: System Recovery in SecondsJun 20, 2005 - in Reviews
Every user is familiar with the problem: Suddenly your computer is infested with a virus, or a freshly installed application sends your whole operating system to kingdom come. These situations aren't nearly as scary when you have Recover Pro 2004 installed.
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