Slashdot Mirror


Samsung HD Unit Bought By Seagate

nanoflower followed up on a recent story about the unpredictable future of data storage. That story talked about Western Digital buying Hitachi, leaving just 4 players. Now: "Yet another hard drive company is going by the wayside, as Seagate is buying the Samsung HDD unit. Seagate is buying the unit for $1.375 billion (half in stock, half in cash)."

9 of 153 comments (clear)

  1. Well crap by FrozenFOXX · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I've actually been a fan of my Samsung hard drives. So far they've outlasted every other drive manufacturer I've tried. Now I know that technically they all usually have roughly similar failure rates, but at least from personal experience right about every Samsung product of any kind I've bought I've always gotten great service on and great reliability from, something important for me with hard drives.

    Seagate? Not so much. Well, guess it doesn't matter now as like it or not that's who we're getting. Still, I can't imagine a shrinking consumer drive market is very good for the consumer.

    --
    "Just a fox, a whisper."
    1. Re:Well crap by afidel · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Perhaps their low end line is bad *because* they bought Maxtor. Their enterprise line is still just fine, been cruising at ~1.5% AFR here for the last 5 years with ~90% Seagate disks.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
  2. Aha! by dimethylxanthine · · Score: 4, Funny

    Nobody expects a Seagate acquisition!

  3. Re:More interesting... by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 4, Insightful

    With more exclusive partnerships and more efficient organization, maybe we'll see costs come down on some of their notebooks/ssd's.

    "Exclusive partnerships" always send up a monopoly warning flag for me. That usually means higher profits for producers, and higher costs for the end user.

    --
    Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
  4. Re:Merge by Hero+Zzyzzx · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Oh god, please no. I have had nothing but horrible experiences with Seagate drives recently under linux:

    • this bug hit me,
    • I had at least 4 RMAs on the same drive due to a similar "click of death",
    • I had a "click of death" on an iomega external HDD that was actually - you guessed it - seagate inside.

    I don't get it. Seagate used to be great - WHY did they engineer drives to not work properly under linux? The idea of an HDD that doesn't work under linux is just wrong - like you have to actually try to make something that crappy.

    I ended up just replacing the still under warranty Seagate drives with Western Digitals. Problems since then? Zero. LEAVE WESTERN DIGITAL ALONE!

    PS: I must be dumb. Slashdot is not styling my bulletted list properly.

  5. Darn! by shic · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Seagate and Samsung are my favourite two drive manufacturers at the moment... I'd have preferred they remain separate.

    If I'm thinking about my data, I want - above all - for it to be reliably stored. With the best will in the world, eventually every drive fails... So... I tend to buy different makes of drives in pairs - from different suppliers... the logic is that it is far less likely that both drives will fail simultaneously - leaving my raid-1 data intact.

    If Seagate and Samsung share manufacturing/storage/distribution, then the independence of Seagate and Samsung drives vanishes... forcing me to go to another less-preferred vendor.

    I wonder when these consolidations will stop being a good idea? I definitely hope that it will be possible to buy independently manufactured drives in future.

  6. How much did Seagate actually pay by Fireshadow · · Score: 5, Funny

    after the mail in rebate ?

    --
    "It's one thing to talk about the poetry of machines. Quite another to listen to it for yourself."
  7. Back at Ya by BSalita · · Score: 5, Funny

    $1.375 billion or $990 million formatted.

  8. Windows as well, Seagate External Drives are bad by Azarman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I recently had a 1.5TB External Seagate drive. it worked for a few months then started clicking and within 2 weeks the thing failed. I did some google searching and really REALLY wish i had done more research before buying the drive because it is a very common problem. I even got a replacement and the same thing happened. I have read of someone having 5 replacements in 6 months. Seagate are aware there is a problem as they replace the drive instantly but no public recall.

    Google Link to LOTS of web pages details the issues http://www.google.co.uk/search?sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8&q=Seagate+External+drive+clicking
    Seagate Forums
    http://forums.seagate.com/t5/Other-External-products/Seagate-Expansions-producing-loud-clicking-sound/td-p/30962/page/3
    http://forums.seagate.com/t5/Maxtor-OneTouch-Products/Maxtor-External-Hard-Drive-Clicking-Noise-Not-Working/td-p/16446
    http://forums.seagate.com/t5/Other-External-products/Solution-Seagate-Expansion-Desktop-External-Drive-clicking/td-p/49865

    I could supply more links, but from a personal view NEVER use seagate for anything but Throw away data. I was using it as a backup for my PC and in the end lost 500gb of data in the process.
    Do not by Seagate hard drives