Sony Develops Fluid-Filled Bags For Hard Disks
MsManhattan writes "Sony has filed for a US patent on a liquid-filled airbag that cushions hard disks from heavy shocks in portable electronic devices. 'The liquid used could be water or silicon oil,' and 'the electronics would of course be in a liquid-tight case.' Sony expects to use the technology in mobile devices such as cameras, media players, smartphones, and laptops." The article mentions a clever approach Sony has come up with to handle shocks of varying intensity.
God beat them to it, our brains are suspended in liquid.
Panasonic have had a gel 'bag' protecting their hard-drives in their Toughbooks for some time. Surely they've suitably protected their IP.
I even managed to find a picture of one on Ebay
FTA: Why is it called an "air bag" if it is filled with liquid?
I don't know about fanfic, but I've gel-mounted HDDs since the middle nineties. This is entirely common in the aerospace industry. As a matter of fact, try running "hard disk gel mount" (without the quotes) through google one of these days for a long list of patents already granted for this idea.
We're all born with nothing.
If you die in debt, you're ahead.
If the camera is carrying one of the several models of microdrives, they do. I've always stuck with CF because of write times and storage density, but I know a couple of photographers who like 'em.
Surely a cushion of water wouldn't protect something like a cell phone hitting the concrete
I would assume that the liquid would be considerably more viscous than plain water.
To demonstrate this in the real world, My last cellphone survived a fall of 70 feet onto a rock bed just because it hit on part of the plastic case that wasn't connected to the motherboard. If it would have hit on the bottom metal connector, it would have had very little or no chance. If instead there were a thin
Well, back to rejecting software patent applications.
Cause it mentioned Sony ;)
# cat
Damn, my RAM is full of llamas.
The main reason gel filled cushions have been invented is the cost per gigabyte of solid state memory is astronomical compared to harddrives.
Unscientific quick example, 160Gb 2.5" IDE harddrive = £70, 16Gb 2.5" IDE flash memory harddrive = £280. 10x the space for 1/4 the price.
I know the price of flash memory storage is falling, but in comparison the price of harddrive storage is plummeting.
To do something right, you often have to roll up your sleeves and get busy.
Yup, had one of those in my CF-25 six or seven years ago. I read TFA and don't see anything novel or non-obvious about Sony's claims. Le sigh.