WD's Terabyte Scorpio Notebook Drive Tested
MojoKid writes "Recently, Western Digital stepped out and announced their new 1TB 9.5mm Scorpio Blue 2.5-inch notebook drive. The announcement was significant in that it's the first drive of this capacity to squeeze that many bits into an industry standard 9.5mm, 2.5" SATA form-factor. To do this, WD drove areal density per platter in their 2.5" platform to 500GB. The Scorpio Blue 1TB drive spins at only 5400RPM but its performance is actually surprising. Since areal density per platter has increased significantly, the drive actually bests some 7200RPM drives."
And the 2.5" form factor once again pulls into approximately equal volumetric parity with the 3.5" (when you count the actual space consumed by the drive and mounting arrangement for 2-3 2.5" drives compared to 1 3.5" drive). And roughly equal power consumption per GB as well.
The Simpsons: You only live twice
[Scorpio has a James Bond-style secret agent strapped to a table with a cutting laser edging up towards him]
Hank Scorpio: Ingenious, isn't it, Mr. Bunt?
Secret Agent: Scorpio, you're totally mad.
Hank Scorpio: Hah. I wouldn't point fingers, you jerk.
Secret Agent: So, do you expect me to talk?
Hank Scorpio: I don't expect anything from you, except to die and be a very cheap funeral.
[walks off]
Hank Scorpio: You're gonna die now.
Folks, before you start commenting on this one, take a minute to think about how many trees, whales, children, and owls die to make your special electronic gadgets. Give a hoot, be like me and stop using the internet, before it devours our beautiful, sexy mother Earth! --Underground Commando of the Campaign for a Free Internet
Has there ever been a single generation of drives in which the next generation of 5400 RPM drives did not beat the existing generation of 7200 RPM drives? Okay, maybe you have to skip two generations. Either way, it's not unusual by any means. When people ask on audio recording boards whether they need 7200 RPM drives, I'm always quick to point out that a new 5400 RPM laptop drive approaches the speed of the early 15,000 RPM desktop drives, and can spank the 7200 RPM laptop drives from just a few years back.
The only thing surprising about this drive is that normally the 7200 RPM drives come first, before the 5400 RPM drives at that density.
Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.
I don't know why there is still such craze with high capacity drives for laptops? For me the capacity seized to matter once the drives touched 200 GB. I would opt for 160 GB SSD over 1 TB HDD any day for my laptop. I was just checking out laptops on Internet this evening and when customizing laptops, most sites list 640 GB 5400 RPM drive as an upgrade over 500 GB 7200 RPM drive. i consider that as a downgrade. I would rather have high speed than high capacity. Though in this particular case they do say that in spite of being 5400 RPM it has good performance. But that is a one off case.
but in my laptop i m using 4.5 Drivers.!!! is it good or Not.!? what's your opinion about this... .!?
i am also using this but there is no problem in my laptop..!! he always giving me better service or the total talk is this:- only this is.
Actually, actual actuation actually actuates actually.
Actually,
Actual
For me the capacity seized to matter...
Does this mean you now have a solid-state drive?
Chaos maximizes locally around me.
i also agree with you because i have 4.5 version drivers too... and his company name is gigabyte and they are the best for me because right now m commenting from that lappy ;)
These drives have actually been on the market for well over a year now, and I was (un)lucky enough to pick one up last year when my local Fry's Electronics got them in stock. While the drives themselves are handy because of the amount of data you can squeeze into them, making my macbook pro a beast of a mobile studio (at the time I was using it for music production), they seem to be prone to issues. The first drive lasted about a month, before I almost lost several weeks worth of a project I was working on due to the drive crashing. I was able to retrieve my work from the drive by mounting it externally before it became completely unreadable, and I attribute this to the high density drives not being able to handle the average bouncing around of a laptop in a backpack. When I attached the drive to one of my linux workstations, I could hear the disks spinning up but dmesg wouldn't pick up the drive and they just kept spinning endlessly louder and louder. The second drive lasted about 2 months before a similar problem occurred, though by that time I had migrated most of my work to a different workstation. I replaced the drive with the original 500gb drive my macbook came with, and I haven't had any problems since. In short, I'm not sure if the early drives off the assembly line were just prone to failure more often or if perhaps I was just extremely unlucky with the ones I procured. Either way, I am rather uncomfortable about putting any important data on one of these drives in the future until they've been on the market for a while and have been thoroughly tested.
- Aetheral Research -
Samsung announced theirs back in early June. It's been coming in and out of stock since then. I last saw it on Newegg a couple weeks ago, though curiously it's now marked as deactivated.
The summary makes it sound like "squeezing" 1TB into a laptop drive is impressive, but with 600GB SSDs in the same form-factor (admittedly at almost 10x the price), I'm just not overwhelmed... Especially with the recent stories about optical discs storing 500GB RSN. And the SSD is going to be able to survive being dropped without losing all that data...
And as far as performance, the summary says at 5400RPM it bests the 7200RPM competitors... That's really only true for raw streaming, say video or audio production work. People seem to be blinded by the MB/sec rate and forgetting the average access latency -- which IMHO is the most important factor in almost all cases. I had a client who was pushing back on the 15K RPM discs I recommended for their database several years ago, because the 7.2K RPM discs had a higher MB/sec number. Not for their database, they don't...
Access latency is what, in most cases, makes a computer feel slow.
Yes they would be big, loud, heavy and slow, but they would surely hold 20TB+ in no time. You wouldn't want to use one for your OS, but they'd be perfect for video editing, videos in general or just as a dump to hold whatever data you might have. Also scientists tend to have enormous amounts of data. I also see no problem with backups as you just buy another one and mirror your data (please don't start a backup discussion here). Is it because then they would not sell the newest and biggest 3.5" drives anymore?
It seems everyone is always on about performance and storage capacity. But what about the reliability?
Now, admittedly it's a bit of an edge case but in my home server I have a comparatively ancient 30 GB IDE disk for the system disk and a bunch of SATA drives in RAID-Z for bulk storage and I've been thinking about moving to a new system disk out of pure paranoia (this thing has been in constant use for what seems like an eternity) but I can't seem to find any good statistics for the reliability of current drives.
Is there really no one out there who has said "fuck performance, we're gonna build drives that are good for at least five years"? I know there are a couple of sites out there that have stats collected from users but if I go with the best drives there then I'm still going to have to put a lot of effort into finding anyone even selling those models anymore...
Greylisting is to SMTP as NAT is to IPv4
How the hell is one person's story at all relevant to overall reliability? "Oh no I had two drives fail, they suck!" As the saying goes "The plural of anecdote is not data."
People need to understand that just because hardware failed for you doesn't mean it is bad overall. You need more data. I cannot name a brand of harddrive I haven't seen fail at work. Every single one, I've seen failures on. None of that indicates they are bad. In terms of systems I use I've seen more WD failures than anything else... Because I use more WD drives.
The only brand of drives that I have any valid data to show has more problems is Maxtor. We have seen a statistically significant number of failures in relation to the number of drives deployed from them (in the case of one particular drive, 50% failed after 2 years).
this. thread. is. hilarious.
gigabyte are the best for me!
I hope this is assassintroturfing, because I really like Giga-Byte.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
First poster posts a linkshortened link, then the sockpuppets chime in with psuedo-English. Identified at a glance by the fairly recently registered UIDs for each poster.
I built a physical ram-drive into my SCSI chain from a actual IDE device that uses battery-backed sticks of RAM to present itself to BIOS as having geometry that will store data. What's nice about it is at the drop of a switch it can be cleared of all data just by losing power. Whenever I am moving sensitive data around where it might be searched by somone that could compromise my intellect or security, I would have another ram-drive offsite attached to a remote power-off switch and an engine that would also power-off on unapproved entry in the case it's location was discovered and approached without the right authentication: then as I carry my data in the first ram-drive I will anticipate when to kill the data in my hand-held. Only problem with a ram-drive is the memmory module capacity are what limit their size, and thus the manufacture of their designers usually limit the size to something consumer-low like 2GB but the recent one I saw allows 4GB using DDR3 memmory modules.
Don't trust transportation companies to have honest security without bonus-incentives, because they all have a price-chart bounty as their motivation to report what kind of data they encounter in their unwarranted searches, thus they are all criminal IP theives despite their municipal HQ having a soapbox of draconian IP laws that respect the author, yet their coduct is nothing short of militant squabbling inquisition that costs too much in terms of breach because even governments are subconciously searching to steal betterIP to improve their international abilities.
In other words, the people ought to secure their group option to privately-renting their own transportation and approving their own security conduct to avoid search of matter that is more private or endemic to the culture. It also never hurts to just be your own pilot and captain of your own vessel and ship at your discretion, as I have already done, but then the Occupational governments tend to monopolize their competition into coerced association again for unapproved regulations that establish punitive fines exceeding your effectiveness of securing your data.
What it all boils down to is the violation of property rights, no-matter how it's addressed through the various schemes of Confidence and Trust misplaced to another by notice and sight. If anyone asks what kind of data I am transferring at such risk of security, then I would say it is the content of my own self-surgeries that I've journaled but confide none to divest my patent and study through so-called searches of unrelated matter. As I've told countless avid street COPS many times before, they should use their own phones and computers to search for their own illegal activity.
Les Kent told me he was having trouble with hard drive failures and DOA, and he seemed sure it was because of poor packaging during shipment. So he proudly told me he instituted the "roof test". When a batch of hard drives came in, he would take the boxes up to the roof and toss them off. Those that still worked were considered to "pass the test". He said the quality of drive packaging improved almost overnight when he RMA'd the failed drives.