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zippyjuan
05-23-2007, 11:23 AM
http://www.xbitlabs.com/news/storage/display/20070522083326.html
They beat Fujutsu to the punch- getting theirs out first. I was reading somewhere that laptop HDs are ceramic and tend to shatter if dropped.

Western Digital Ships World’s Most Capacious Hard Drive for Notebooks.
WD Leaves Fujitsu Behind with 250GB Mobile Hard Disk Drive

Category: Storage

by Anton Shilov

[ 05/22/2007 | 08:34 AM ]






Major maker of hard disk drives, Western Digital Corp., said it had begun to ship hard disk drives (HDD) for mobile computers or consumer electronics with 250GB capacity, leaving behind Fujitsu, who promised to start shipping similar hard disk drive only later this year.

The new Scorpio hard drive in 2.5” form-factor is based on two platters with perpendicular recording technology, uses 5400rpm motor, has 8MB of cache and features Serial ATA-150 interface. According to WD, Scorpio 250GB has 4.20ms average latency, 12ms read seek time latency and 2.0ms track-to-track seek time.

The new model, just as other contemporary Scorpio HDDs, features WD proprietary technology WhisperDrive, which makes the drive quiet, use less power and run at cool operating temperatures. In addition, the new hard drive supports ShockGuard and IntelliSeek.

"The 2.5” market continues to be a major focus for WD, and this 250GB WD Scorpio drive represents our second-generation perpendicular magnetic recording platform. The WD Scorpio 250 GB hard drive is a direct result of the significant investments WD has made in proprietary head technologies as well as significant system level feature innovation,” said Jim Morris, WD's vice president and general manager of notebook storage.

According to market research firm IDC, adoption of PMR technology in mobile 2.5” hard drives will sustain an increase in the average capacity shipped close to the average growth rate of 32% for the past five years. The firm states that by 2011, shipments of mobile 2.5” hard drives will more than double 2006 shipment volumes.

DarkFury
05-23-2007, 11:37 AM
Honestly, if you drop a laptop, the hard drive is just one of the components I'd be worried about breaking. :eek:

johnnymk
05-23-2007, 01:16 PM
Why would anyone drop a laptop? If they do, that's just plain dumb.

shocky123
05-23-2007, 05:50 PM
In the event that I did manage to drop my laptop while it was still on, I would enjoy having this feature because it would help to prevent significant data loss, or complete data loss on my drive, which is far less replaceable than other components, still, dont drop your laptop fool!

Devhux
05-23-2007, 07:11 PM
Why would anyone drop a laptop? If they do, that's just plain dumb.

Nobody would drop a laptop on purpose* -- but anything can happen by accident. :)

* <-- unless it's a Panasonic Toughbook, and the sales rep is trying to demonstrate its ruggedness.

johnnymk
05-23-2007, 08:49 PM
I just assumed that most people would handles a laptop like they would handle a newborn baby...VERY CAREFULLY.

Jeffbx
05-24-2007, 05:28 AM
It's rare, but it does happen - I even had one idiot back over his with his car, and another guy who slammed the lid closed with a pen sitting on his keyboard - bye bye, LCD. However, the best was back in the day before laptops were all that powerful, and our field guys carried around "portable" workstations in big aluminium suitcases that weighted about 30lbs. One came back with a huge dent in the side, byt mysteriously no one knew anything about it. It was only a couple of years later that someone let on that they dropped it down the escalator at the airport. I'm surprised no one was killed.

The funny thing is that no one likes to admit they dropped it - they just bring it in saying "something's wrong with it". After I see the cracked case or hear little parts rattling around inside, they MAY admit to it if I ask directly, but no one will offer that info freely.

DarkFury
05-24-2007, 05:48 AM
The funny thing is that no one likes to admit they dropped it - they just bring it in saying "something's wrong with it". After I see the cracked case or hear little parts rattling around inside, they MAY admit to it if I ask directly, but no one will offer that info freely.
They are probably too embarrassed to admit it. :heh:

Either that, or they are afraid the company is gonna make them pay for it.

Jeffbx
05-24-2007, 09:13 AM
I'm sure it's a little of both. But I have to say that the Dell CompleteCare warranty has paid for itself more than once!

shocky123
05-24-2007, 11:08 AM
I just assumed that most people would handles a laptop like they would handle a newborn baby...VERY CAREFULLY.


:stupid:

I punt babies though ;-)

lol, j/k

johnnymk
05-27-2007, 08:59 AM
http://eshop.macsales.com/item/Western%20Digital/WD2500BEVS/

$300 for 25% more capacity and twice the price of a 200 GB unit.