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IBM's "Pixie Dust" Drives Improved

jeffroe writes "Infoworld has an article stating that IBM has enhanced it's 'Pixie Dust' technology yet again. The areal density has improved to 70gb per square inch! Apparently that means 80gb drives for laptops." IBM's also predicted hard drives to have 100gb per square inch by 2003. Storage space just keeps increasing.

5 of 297 comments (clear)

  1. Who cares by geek · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The storage capacity we have now is adaquate for at least another few years. I don't know anyone that uses more than 60 gigs, and they are few and far between.

    What we need is faster drives. I'm personally sick of how slow ATA drives are. Every other aspect of computers has made leaps and bounds in speed, with this one exception. Why? A fast hard drive makes all the difference in system speed.

    1. Re:Who cares by rtaylor · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The only way to speed up harddrives is to pass more bits infront of the drive head in a set amount of time.

      Add more platters and/or readheads, spin them faster, or compress the bits so that more pass per revolution as more fit in the same space.

      Since anything faster than 10k seems to heat up in a hurry you won't find them in a home system soon. Nor will you find 'large sized' drives soon. Good chance platters could become thinner, and put more into the housing but thats an expensive proposition. Data compression (physical, not mathematical) like IBM is doing is a very effective method of complying with your request.

      --
      Rod Taylor
  2. Aren't they getting out? by Faizdog · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Isn't IBM leaving the Harddrive market? I'm glad they're working on this though. IBM has recently been on the cutting edge of personal computing devices with being the driving force beyond harddrive research and technoligies such as MRAM.

    --
    -"Those who fought today will die tommorow."-
  3. What to use this space for. by FuzzyDaddy · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I like to think of it as a challenge. I just bought a new hard drive, and I can save all my photographs on them. (Not that I don't need to back up to CD-ROM...)

    What to do with 10 times as much storage? I could start keeping home videos on there. Or store all the network traffic that comes on and off my computer indefinitely. Or keep track of the voltage waveform coming in off the power lines, and post processing it after a year to look for frequency shifts.

    But this talk of "no-one but video pirates would need this" is silly. Just give it to me, I'll think of something.

    --
    It's not wasting time, I'm educating myself.
  4. Re:Speed by AJWM · · Score: 5, Interesting

    But a drive running at 7200 RPM at greater densities can be faster than a 10000 RPM drive at lower densities

    Faster at transfer rate, yes.

    Faster at track-to-track seek time, very likely (tracks being closer together).

    But faster in rotational latency, which is the major bottleneck, no fscking way.

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    -- Alastair