Slashdot Mirror


Toshiba Unveils 80GB 'iPod drive'

sushant_bhatia_progr writes "The Register has an article about a new 80GB drive from Toshiba. Toshiba says it will ship an 80GB 1.8in hard drive in Q3 2005 - a year after it introduced the 60GB version that can currently to be found inside the iPod Photo. The 80GB HDD - model number MK8007GAH - comes in a 7.9 x 5.4 x 0.8cm casing. Toshiba will ship a 40GB version - model number MK4007GAL - that's just 0.5cm thick in the second quarter. It's lighter, too: 51g to the 80GB HDD's 62g. Toshiba's current 40GB and 60GB (model numbers MK4004GAH and MK6006GAH, respectively) 1.8in HDDs are 0.8cm thick, so the new drive should make for thinner mid-range iPods. Both drives spin at 4200rpm, offer an average seek time of 15ms and operate across an Ultra DMA 100 interface. They can take 500G operating shock and 1500G non-operating shock."

10 of 375 comments (clear)

  1. Captain Obvious speaks - by EvilStein · · Score: 4, Funny

    "I see a new, higher capacity iPod in the future..maybe just in time for MacWorld SF 2005..."

    *cues fog machine*

  2. I was so excited until...... by p.rican · · Score: 4, Funny

    I realized now Apple will have yet another high capacity music player I'll never be able to afford. Thanks Steve

    --

    /. --"Demented and sad....but social" -Judd Nelson

  3. Re:I'd sooner see by Microlith · · Score: 5, Funny

    2. The iPod gets 12 hours now. The iPod Photo gets 15. Whaddaya want? A micro-fusion-reactor?

    YES

  4. Re:Need 100GB+ by julesh · · Score: 3, Funny

    By my calculation (based on average CD length of 55 minutes, don't know if this is accurate for your collection) it should fit.

    1200 x 55 x 60 is a little under 4 million seconds
    x 160 KBps = 640 Gbits
    = 80 Gbytes

    It'll be tight though. You might have to drop some of your least-favourite tracks (with 1200 CDs, I'm sure there are some on there that you actually don't like, right?)

  5. Re:Do some math... by smatthew · · Score: 4, Funny

    I think you are off a few decimal places......

    --
    slashdot username - at - email.domain.name
  6. Re:500G operating shock by pedestrian+crossing · · Score: 3, Funny

    Your head deformed as it hit the ice, spreading the impact out over time. Also, your brain (or what's left of it!) is cushioned by a surrounding layer of fluid.

    Personally, I wear a helmet to protect my "money-maker"....

    --
    A house divided against itself cannot stand.
  7. Ah! They learned their lesson. by nativespeaker · · Score: 3, Funny

    The Japanese manufacturer didn't mention any customers by name of course, but having supplied Apple with micro hard drives to date, it seems likely the relationship will continue with the new, higher capacity.

    We all remember the fit that Apple threw when they pre-announced Apple's order for the 60-gig. Seems like they're thinking things through this time.

  8. Re:500G operating shock by karnal · · Score: 4, Funny

    Personally, I wear a helmet to protect my "money-maker"....

    That's one thing our sex ed class in high school taught us as well...

    oh wait..

    --
    Karnal
  9. Re:Size Storage by nolife · · Score: 3, Funny

    At what point in your interaction with other people, do you ask if they would like to feel your iPod. I found the whole concept of that a little strange. I carry quite a few electronic gadgets and things around with me. I've never felt inclined to ask anyone if they would like to see them or feel them.

    --
    Bad boys rape our young girls but Violet gives willingly.
  10. Re:thin air by ExMember · · Score: 5, Funny

    Audiophiles have plenty of other excuses for not buying iPods, most of them, as near as I can tell, made up out of thin air.

    For those that don't know, thin air is a huge problem if you are trying to faithfully reproduce a sound. Thicker air carries and holds sound much better, with less distortion (especially in the upper ranges).

    iPods, like most other advanced electronics are manfactured in what is called a "cleanroom environment", where normal air is stripped of all it's suspended particulates. This thinned out air is then included in the iPods when they are shipped are are one of the reasons it tends to attenuate the upper frequencies, leading to muffled highs.

    Hope that clarifes things a bit.