1-Terabyte-Drive PCs Coming from Dell

Mar 17, 2007 

1-Terabyte-Drive PCs Coming from Dell 

Dell is the first computer system supplier to ship PCs with the giant hard 
drives targeted at users of large amounts of digital media. 

Chris Mellor, Techworld 

Friday, March 16, 2007 05:00 PM PDT 

Dell is the first computer system supplier to ship 1 terabyte (1,000 gigabytes) 
hard drives targeted at users needing to store large amounts of digital
media. The higher capacity is particularly needed for storing video content, 
such as high-definition video. This will affect consumers first but then 
business,
particularly media-related businesses and applications. It is a reversal of 
normal practice where business received higher-capacity disk drives first.


Dell vice president, Neil Hand said: "This type of capability used to be 
available only to the largest corporations. With the spectacular advancement in
hard drives and the engineering in our systems, we're now able to bring it to 
consumers." 

The first Dell PCs to use the drives will be its own Alienware-branded gaming 
PCs. XPS systems will then follow suit. A check on the US Alienware site shows
four 1TB drives can be shipped. The drives are not mentioned on the UK site 
yet. 

Dell will use Hitachi GST's 1TB Deskstar 7K1000 drive spinning at 7,200rpm with 
a 3GBit/s serial ATA interface. The drive uses perpendicular recording,
has five platters, a read access time of 8.5msecs and a write time of 9.2msecs. 
It has a cache of 32MB and an 8.7ms average seek time. 

Dell is also launching a 'video time capsule service'; users can upload videos 
to (www.studiodell.com) where Dell will store them, initially on the 1TB
drives, for a claimed 50 years. 

In the server area it is expected that capacity-centric or secondary online 
storage, with applications such as virtual tape libraries, will use 1TB drives.
Primary online drive arrays will likely move to smaller format 2.5-inch drives 
with greater I/O bandwidth from the drive shelves. Disk arrays using 1TB
drives will face a RAID rebuild time problem as re-building data on drives to 
recover from a failed drive will take longer, and increase the likelihood
of a second drive failure during the rebuild, meaning lost data. This will 
hasten the move to RAID 6-type schemes which can cope with two consecutive drive
failures in an array. 

It is also to be expected that external USB-connected drives used for backup by 
manufacturers like La Cie will offer products with twice the capacity of
current 500GB-drive ones. 

Dell's 1TB drive is priced at $540 (around £300 at current exchange rates.) 
Although a new federal law makes pretexting illegal, it will likely remain a
problem for phone companies and other potential victims of the practice. 
16-Mar-2007 They won't divulge their real names, they call their project a 
"whiny,

http://www.pcworld.com/article/id,129924-pg,1/article.html

Vikas Kapoor,
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