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1.5GB HDs On a 1" Platter

darthv506 was among several to point out a Cnet story describing a new "1.5GB HD on a 1" Platter. Samsung is releasing a sub 600 buck video camera that is "Smaller than a pack of cigarettes" featuring the drive. The drive is actually in production, and apparently goes for $65 in volume.

6 of 239 comments (clear)

  1. Re:ahem... by PerlGuru · · Score: 5, Informative

    The main thing here is that this is normal hard-drive type technology just with higher density, probably lower power consumption as well (still reading article). This makes it much more economical then a Flash drive of equivelent size. Note that in the write-up a cost of $65 in quantity is much cheaper then flash drives.

  2. Re:RTFA by joe630 · · Score: 5, Informative

    "A reduction in components cuts costs. The 1.5-inch 5GB drive, which has been in volume manufacturing since mid-April, sells for $65 in quantities of 10,000. The company is aiming for $50, Magenis said. By contrast, existing standard 1-inch Microdrives from IBM sell for $219 at retail or more, while 1GB flash cards go for around $200."

  3. Re:Data Transfer will be the bottleneck by altman · · Score: 5, Informative

    Erm, no.

    USB2.0 or Firewire both have plenty enough bandwidth to saturate the drive. Cornice drives manage well excess of 3MBytes/sec in my experience (I work for Rio), which is faster than I've ever seen from my 1GB microdrive plugged into a PCMCIA-CF adaptor.

    Remember USB2.0/Firewire can support up to in excess of 30MBytes/sec. This is faster than a CF interface can manage - CF doesn't have DMA capability.

    Hugo

  4. Re:RTFA by robkill · · Score: 4, Informative

    That's an error in the article. According to Cornice's website, It's a 1.5GB drive.

    --
    DMCA - Chilling free speech since 1998.
  5. The New Samsung Camcorder by nherc · · Score: 4, Informative
    The ITCAM-7 is pretty slick actual... tiny, cheap and it uses MPEG4 (there's a pic of it here as well).

    Some specs:

    • Camcorder: MPEG4, 1.5 or 3 Mbps, VGA (640x480)
    • Digital camera (JPEG, 640x480)
    • MP3 player
    • Audio recorder
    • Data storage
    • Webcam
    • Lens: Optical 10x zoom
    • CCD: 350K pixels
    • LCD: 2.0" LCD, 211K pixels
    • Storage: 1.5 GB HDD, Memory stick
    • Recording time: 66min in "Super Fine" mode
    • Interface: USB 2.0
    • Size: 64mm x 33.5mm x 103mm (about the size of a thick calculator)
    • Weight: 185g
    --
    'He was a dreamer, a thinker, a speculative philosopher... or, as his wife would have it, an idiot.' - Douglas Adams
  6. Fortunately Hitachi's beat them with a 4GB disk by stienman · · Score: 4, Informative
    Hitachi announced a 4GB Microdrive (one inch) earlier this year.

    The differences between these two products:
    • Hitachi is more expensive, more parts, requires more power
    • Cornice is more 'dumb', less capacity, smaller (mounted to PCB) and non-removable
    So they each have their advantages. I don't know if I could be satisfied with being unable to 'change tapes' in my camcorder - it probably takes on the order of minutes to transfer from the camera to a computer or other storage device, and I doubt the drive has enough throughput and a low enough seek time to allow both high speed recording and high speed reading which would allow me to offload portions of the data while still recording.

    But not owning a camcorder I don't know what the usage patterns typically are. I imagine that most days it's used it isn't used for more than an hour throughout the whole day. At this point the MPEG4 encoder may require more power then the HD, which means that a very small li-ion polymer battery will last through the entire drive.

    -Adam