Seagate Unveils 1.5 Terabyte Desktop Hard Drive 
The 3.5-inch drive packs its storage on four platters and has a Serial ATA 
interface of 3 gigabits per second and a sustained data rate of up to 120 
megabytes per second. 
By Antone Gonsalves 
InformationWeek 
Seagate (NYSE: STX) Technology on Thursday introduced a 1.5 terabyte hard drive 
for the desktop, and two half-terabyte notebook drives. 

The Barracuda 7200.11, the 11th generation of Seagate's flagship drive for 
desktop PCs, is targeted at mainstream computers, workstations, and gaming and 
high-end PCs. Seagate said it achieves the high capacity through the use of 
what it calls "perpendicular magnetic recording" technology, which arranges the 
magnetic bits vertically on end on the surface of the disc to boost storage. 

The 3.5-inch drive packs its storage on four platters and has a Serial ATA 
interface of 3 gigabits per second and a sustained data rate of up to 120 
megabytes per second for faster boot times, application startup and file 
access. The drive is also available in models between 160GB and 1TB. 

For the faster growing notebook market, Seagate introduced the Momentus 7200.4 
and the 5400.6. The former has a spin speed of 7,200 revolutions per minute and 
the latter a speed of 5,400 RPM . Both are 2.5 inches and a have a Serial ATA 
interface of 3Gb per second. The drives also have shock protection technology 
that parks the heads off the disc when it senses that the notebook is in free 
fall of as little as eight inches, Seagate said. 

The three drives include a five-year warranty. The Barracuda 7200.11 is 
scheduled to ship in August. The Momentus notebook drives are expected to ship 
in the fourth quarter. 

Seagate and rivals Hitachi and Samsung are rushing to produce the highest 
capacity devices for the PC to meet the rising demand for storage. Hitachi, for 
example, recently introduced a second-generation 1TB hard drive. 

Much of the demand is driven by the increasing use of PCs to edit and store 
video, photos and music. All the major PC makers, such asDell ( Dell) and 
Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HPQ), sell entertainment-focused computers. 

http://www.informationweek.com/news/storage/systems/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=208808503

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