Hitachi External HDDs Looks Sleek, Does Cloud

Wednesday Hitachi introduced its new line of external hard drives, the LifeStudio series. The company boasts LifeStudio as the first and only all-in-one external solution for organizing and protecting user data. Built for both the PC and Mac, the new USB 2.0 drives come packed with a virtual 3D wall for viewing content, a USB key for "grab n' go" file management, and a built-in app that pools together media and documents stored on the internal HDD.

"After a quick install of the software, the drive's innovative technology instantly kicks in," the company said. "Your content--photos, videos, music and documents stored on your computer, any connected USB storage device or online sites such as Facebook, Flickr and Picasa Web Albums--automatically begins to appear in chronological order on your stunning 3D wall. Music is organized by artist or album. Now all of your most precious digital content is easily available at your finger tips. No more searching through files and folders."

In addition to local storage, the new line of external drives also offer 3GB cloud backup for free--those who need more virtual space can purchase 250GB for $49 per year. As for actual physical capacities, the LifeStudio Mobile model offers three variants: 250GB, 320GB, and 500GB--the Mobile Plus versions only provide the latter two capacities. For the desktop series, the LifeStudio Desk provides 500GB, 1TB, and 2TB whereas at the Desk Plus provides only the latter two.

Hitachi said that the new line of external HDDs will be available at retail and online stores in mid-July. Prices will range from $79.99 to $219.99, depending on the model. To learn more, check out the drive on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and the official LifeStudio website.

  • IFLATLINEI
    The Cloud. Pffft. Their heads are in the clouds.
    Reply
  • wing2010
    It looks intersting but I prefer my NAS.
    Reply
  • tharkis842
    Hmm, interesting.
    Reply
  • WarraWarra
    Why not just use your iPhone instead ?

    So how do they expect you to upload 3gb data, 76 hours or more and ISP going crazy with internet traffic shaping and blocking your service for life for over usage ????

    I don't get all this psycho everything has to be on the defective barely working internet.

    Toilet paper is not even safe on the internet now they want everyone to put sensative data on the internet just to be used against you in a court of law.

    Isn't facebook and youtube boring enough already.

    Guilty until proven innocent ?????
    Reply
  • wotan31
    NAS sucks. Crappy throughput and even crappier I/O performance. Ethernet and TCP/IP are possibly the absolute worst interconnect for bulk data storage. Second only to the crappy USB2. Firewire 800 has been around for years and gives 75 MB/s in real world performance. Compare that to the 35 MB/s of USB2 and it's no contest. The high latency of Ethernet makes it entirely unsuitable for all but the most mundane storage tasks. Sorry, but an external disk is useless it's connected with either Firewire 800, or eSATA.
    Reply
  • wittermark
    wotan31NAS sucks. Crappy throughput and even crappier I/O performance. Ethernet and TCP/IP are possibly the absolute worst interconnect for bulk data storage. Second only to the crappy USB2. Firewire 800 has been around for years and gives 75 MB/s in real world performance. Compare that to the 35 MB/s of USB2 and it's no contest. The high latency of Ethernet makes it entirely unsuitable for all but the most mundane storage tasks. Sorry, but an external disk is useless it's connected with either Firewire 800, or eSATA.
    lmao you really have no idea what you are talking about, my NAS in raid 5 reads at 100+MB/s, and LOL firewire(failwire), no thanks, ill stick to my USB 3.0
    Reply
  • dEAne
    It looks strange for me.
    Reply