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Seagate First to Ship 1 Billion Hard Drives; Expects Next Billion Within Five Years

D_o_S

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Seagate Technology announced today that it is the first hard drive manufacturer worldwide to have shipped 1 billion hard drives - a number not only staggering in size but also emblematic of the massive amount of digital content being created in the home, hand, office, car and dozens of other markets. Consider this: the 1 billion hard drives Seagate has delivered equates to approximately 79 million terabytes, able to store 158 billion hours of digital video or 1.2 trillion hours of your favorite music - and Seagate hard drives and storage solutions enable people to create, share, enjoy and protect more digital content every day.

As further testimony to its market leadership and the central role storage solutions play in the digital world today, Seagate projects that although it took 29 years to reach the 1 billion milestone, the company will ship its next billion in less than five years. Also, by the time its nearest competitor reaches 1 billion drives shipped, Seagate will already be close to shipping its second billion.

Seagate's billionth drive milestone comes as hard drive shipments continue to increase dramatically. According to Gartner Group, last year alone more than 500 million drives were shipped, compared to 1990, when slightly less than 30 million were shipped.

In 1979, Seagate's first product, the ST506 hard drive, could store 5 megabytes of data or the equivalent of one MP3 song. The drive weighed about five pounds and cost $1,500, or $300 per megabyte. Today, a typical Seagate hard drive offers a terabyte of data (or 1 million megabytes), which has enough capacity to record 32 days of high-definition video around the clock - at a cost of 1/5000th of a cent ($0.00022) per megabyte.

"This company has an amazing, colorful and important history, which continues to be written every day by our 55,000 employees around the world," said Bill Watkins, Seagate CEO. "Al Shugart and a few others started the company behind a convenience store in 1979 and enabled the birth of the first PCs. Today we're at the center of the digital content revolution. So reaching this milestone is a great opportunity for us to reflect on our accomplishments and those of our predecessors, and to also look forward to the great things we can still achieve as a company."

Long-time Seagate customer, HP, congratulated the company on this achievement. "Reaching this milestone could only be possible through exceptionally strong leadership, committed employees and deep corporate values that focus on innovation, collaboration and delivering superior customer service," said Ike Harris, VP of notebook supply chain at HP. "These values are very consistent with HP's and this alignment reflects the strength of our partnership."

The rapid growth of digital content continues to come from a wide range of sources. For example, analysts estimate that there are over one billion digital still and phone cameras in the world and that those devices accounted for 250 billion created images in 2006. It is predicted that user-generated content sites (like Flickr and YouTube) will produce 65 billion downloads/views by 2010.

"Digital content proliferation is a long-term phenomenon," according to John Rydning, IDC's Research Director for hard drives. "This phenomenon is pushing demand for hard drives to more than 600 million units per year by 2010 and will continue to fuel hard drive demand in the decade ahead."

For more information on this important milestone, please go to the website: http://1b.seagatestorage.com

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Out of those billion, I wonder how many were used to store PORN?
 
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spearman914

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hv43082 said:
Out of those billion, I wonder how many were used to store PORN?

Every single one... the question is, how much porn per drive?

In all seriousness, though, 1 billion drives is a fantastic number, especially when you consider this:

Seagate said:
Seagate projects that although it took 29 years to reach the 1 billion milestone, the company will ship its next billion in less than five years. Also, by the time its nearest competitor reaches 1 billion drives shipped, Seagate will already be close to shipping its second billion.

What I'd really like to know, is how many of those drives died/were RMA'd - those numbers would be interesting.
 

jbunch07

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out of 79 million terabytes its 70 million was porn....
on a serious note...thats a lot of storage space....
In 1979, Seagate’s first product, the ST506 hard drive, could store 5 megabytes of data or the equivalent of one MP3 song. The drive weighed about five pounds and cost $1,500, or $300 per megabyte. Today, a typical Seagate hard drive offers a terabyte of data (or 1 million megabytes), which has enough capacity to record 32 days of high-definition video around the clock – at a cost of 1/5000th of a cent ($0.00022) per megabyte.
wow im glad i live in this day and age...what is it going to coast another 30 years down the road???
 

thoughtdisorder

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We'll have to start calling them McSeagate now and putting the number sold in billions on their sign!:laugh:
 
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What I'd really like to know, is how many of those drives died/were RMA'd - those numbers would be interesting.

Exactly. While I hear that the newer ones are good, there's no way I ever trusted a Seagate from back in the day.

Imagine if Maxtor (if they weren't bought out) had claimed they sold X number of drives LOL. You could for a fact say 99% failed :roll: Those will remain the worst drives of all time, EXCEPT, Quantum Fireballs - which earned their name rather well :laugh: (the chipset burned up in every one)
 

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Maxtor made some awesome hdds. in fact, I still have mine from 4 years ago (SATA) in my older pc I replaced with this one. Im betting they are including their purchase of maxtor into these numbers. WD, Hitachi and Seagate all make fantastic drives.
 

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The Seagate and Maxtor drives that I use in my network are the most reliable.
I have had more WD failures than anything else.
 
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They'll never reach 1 billion drives sold in the next 5 years, not even in the next 100 years. With SSD's on the horizon quickly taking over and Seagate's arrogant attitude (nobody likes an aggressive IP-litigating company - think SCO) they'll be crushed unless they switch gears and begin producing SSD's themselves.
 
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