Tiny hard drive packs a big punch
By Alfred Hermida
BBC News Online technology editor in Las
Vegas You could soon be
able to store much more on a MP3 player, digital camera or mobile phone.
Toshiba has developed a tiny hard
drive which measures less than an inch across but can hold between two and four
gigabytes of data. The drive, about the
size of a £1 coin, was announced at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las
Vegas. The hard drive has emerged as one
of the key components in the push to bring computing technologies to the home.
Some video cameras and music players
such as Apple's iPod have taken advantage of the shrinking size of hard drives.
'Significant breakthrough'
Toshiba was the first major
manufacturer to come out with a 1.8-inch drive holding up to 40GB, which is used
in the iPod and other MP3 players. Since
then, others have raced to catch up. Hitachi and others now sell one inch hard
drives that can hold 1GB to 4GB of data.
But Toshiba says it is the first company
to break the one inch barrier with its new drive.
"Our new miniature drive is a
significant technological breakthrough," said Nick Spittle of Toshiba Storage
Device Division Europe. "It is set to
bring explosive growth in smaller and more mobile digital devices, with a host
of hot new portable gadgets for the consumer."
Toshiba said it expects the new drive to
inspire others to think about incorporating hard drives into their products,
such as mobile phones and digital camcorders.
"Our small yet powerful, highly
functional drives are an enabling tool for other companies' imagination and
creativity, accelerating the fusion of computing tools and consumer electronics
products," said Mr Spittle. TVs
and mobiles Increasing capacity,
shrinking sizes and falling prices have led to the use of hard drives in
consumer electronics goods, such as digital video recorders.
Samsung has already put a hard drive
into a digital camcorder that is slightly bigger than a computer mouse.
In the future, the miniature drives
could be built into television sets and mobile phones.
Toshiba expects to start mass producing
the drives in the autumn, with its factories churning out 200,000 to 300,000
units a month.
Posted: Fri - January 9, 2004 at 01:33 PM