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Seagate Announces World's Fastest Hard Drive

Slimy   on 16 January 2007 - 20:59 · 16 comments & 4380 views

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Largest hard drive? Been there, done that. Let’s do speed now. Seagate has announced “the world’s fastest hard drive”.

The Savvio 15K touts a seek time of a mere 2.9 ms. The drive offers a 30% decrease in power consumption (5.8 watts at idle) while increasing reliability (1.6 million hour MTBF). A 2.5-inch form factor slims the size and weight from the typical 15K-rpm 3.5-inch drives. Such a change is driven by data center requirements for greater storage performance density while focusing on lowering power consumption and cooling costs. The Seagate Savvio 15K drives are currently shipping in 36GB and 73GB capacities, but only via OEM. HP has Proliant systems with 15K Savvio drives available today.

“Seagate is committed to delivering solutions that will meet the needs of today’s demanding IT environment, and no product demonstrates this better than the Savvio 15K drive. The development of the 2.5-inch Enterprise form factor represented a new way of thinking. Now, with the added number of performance and capacity choices offered, many of the leading enterprise system makers are transitioning from 3.5-inch to 2.5-inch form factor enterprise solutions,” said Sherman Black, senior vice president and general manager of Seagate Enterprise Compute Business.

View: Specs | Picture
News source: DailyTech

Post a comment · Send to friend Comments · There are 16 additional comments
(3 replies) #1 chopyaedoff on 16 Jan 2007 - 21:00
Now gaming a laptop has really become possible.
#1.1 BrainDedd on 16 Jan 2007 - 22:33
As long as your laptop has SCSI?
#1.2 Croquant on 16 Jan 2007 - 23:15
These are not laptop drives. What part of "Enterprise form factor" don't you understand?
#1.3 TRC on 17 Jan 2007 - 02:13
It wouldn't be impossible for laptop manufacturers to add support for these.
#2 Tomo on 16 Jan 2007 - 21:04
That's impressive, it's about time they improved the speed of hard drives. We've reached comfortable sizes for the time being just needed that extra performance boost to make everything run more smoothly.
(2 replies) #3 Julius Caro on 16 Jan 2007 - 21:10
36GB and 73GB?! They're advertising the right thing for once?!
#3.1 vetnw_raptor on 16 Jan 2007 - 21:21
Im quite sure you are referring to the "Why does my 80GB hdd show up in windows as 76 (example)" thing... Let me have you know, manufacturers are actually playing fair... According to the S.I., 80GB = 80*1000 MB, not 80*1024MB. The right unit for computer stuff is GiB, MiB etc. So it's Windows which makes it look a little weird. If you check your HDD's real capacity, you'll notice that its more than 80GB (S.I. of course).
#3.2 Julius Caro on 16 Jan 2007 - 22:06
Yeah I know all about it Anyway, in the computer business it makes little sense to use the SI standards.
(1 reply) #4 hotdog963al on 16 Jan 2007 - 21:11
They left off "Noise" on the chart.
#4.1 Danrarbc641 on 16 Jan 2007 - 21:33
Quote - (hotdog963al said @ #4)
They left off "Noise" on the chart.

Well it's a 15k rpm drive, it's probably quite loud.
#5 FrozenSpoon on 16 Jan 2007 - 21:33
But 15K and even sub-3ms access has been around for awhile. I guess the form factor is new, but this really isn't that exciting for those of us who have used 15K drives for years already.
#6 Digix on 16 Jan 2007 - 22:36
yea world fastest, impressive ?, my ass

UltraSCSI 320 > Savvio
#7 Nose Nuggets on 16 Jan 2007 - 22:55
is UltraSCSI 320 on 2.5" drives?
#8 ChocIST on 17 Jan 2007 - 00:04
Nope dont think so, their 1" high or 1.6" high disks....kinda like normal desktop IDE drives (where the 1.6" is obviously "taller".

ChocIST
#9 TRC on 17 Jan 2007 - 02:16
Title is quite misleading, it should say World's Fastest 2.5" Hard Drive. That makes a pretty big difference overall.
#10 vetL3thal on 17 Jan 2007 - 04:34
I'd love to get one of these as my C drive.

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