Wednesday, July 20, 2005

Seagate's shift to perpendicular recording

Nearly all of hard-disk drive maker Seagate Technology LLC's products will use perpendicular recording technology by the end of 2006, the company's chief financial officer said today.

Perpendicular recording promises big capacity boosts for drives used in servers, PCs, notebooks and portable devices. The technology works by standing the magnetic fields that represent data bits upright instead of flat on the surface of the disk as is common with nearly all of today's drives. Standing the fields upright means they take up less space, enabling more data to be crammed on the disk.

The capacity boosts that Seagate promises will come first on the company's 2.5-inch disks for notebook PCs and 1-inch disks for portable electronics, and then with 3.5-inch disks for desktop PCs and servers, said Charles Pope, the company's chief financial officer, said in a conference call announcing the company's year-end financial results.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

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