Tuesday, June 29th 2010

Seagate Breaks Capacity Ceiling With World's First 3 Terabyte External Desktop Drive

Putting more terabytes in the hands of consumers worldwide, Seagate, the leader in hard drives and storage solutions, today announced the world's first 3 Terabyte (TB) external desktop drive. Available immediately, the 3TB FreeAgent GoFlex Desk external hard drive helps to meet the explosive worldwide demand for digital content storage in both the home and the office. With 3TB of capacity people can store up to 120 HD movies, 1,500 video games, thousands of photos or countless hours of digital music.

A key addition to the company's recently introduced GoFlex family of hard drives, the 3TB GoFlex Desk external drive couples immense capacity with the flexibility to adapt the drive's USB 2.0 interface to a USB 3.0 or FireWire 800 connection to meet varying performance and transfer speed needs. Consumers can easily create, store and access content from either a Windows or Mac OS X computer on the GoFlex Desk external drive, thanks to an included NTFS driver for Mac.
"Consumer capacity demands are quickly out-pacing the needs of business as people continue to collect high-definition videos, photos and music," said Dave Mosley, Seagate executive vice president of Sales, Marketing and Product Line Management. "Seagate has a tradition of designing products that break into new storage frontiers to meet customer requirements and the 3TB GoFlex Desk external drive is no exception-delivering the highest-capacity storage solution available today."

A recent report by Parks Associates indicates the average consumer household will see its digital media storage needs grow to nearly 900GB by year-end 2014, driven in large part by video downloads, managed copies of Blu-ray Disc, and increasing use of DVR recording capabilities. The GoFlex Desk external drive delivers unconstrained, high-capacity storage and automatic, continuous backup with software file encryption to help keep all data safe and secure. The standard USB 2.0 interface can be upgraded to USB 3.0 or FireWire 800 by coupling the drive with the appropriate GoFlex desktop adapter to increase file transfer performance by up to 10x for easier copying or sharing of files.

"As the definition quality of digital cameras increases, playback devices such as digital photo frames and MP3 players proliferate and the use of the Internet for downloading music and video continues to grow, more files accumulate in the home," said Kurt Scherf, vice president and principle analyst of Parks Associates. "Consumers who are active in digital media creation and consumption will witness their digital media storage needs grow nine-fold by 2014, driving the demand for higher capacity, easy-to-use storage solutions."

The GoFlex Desk external drive is compatible with both the Windows operating system and Mac computers. Each drive includes an NTFS driver for Mac, which allows the drive to store and access files from both Windows and Mac OS X computers without reformatting. The NTFS driver is simply installed once on a Mac computer, allowing it to read and write files on a Windows formatted drive. Its sleek black , 3.5-inch design sits either vertically or horizontally to accommodate any desktop environment.

The 3TB GoFlex Desk external drive with USB 2.0 adapter can be purchased on Seagate.com and through select retailers for $249.99.
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42 Comments on Seagate Breaks Capacity Ceiling With World's First 3 Terabyte External Desktop Drive

#26
Fourstaff
TAViXSo what happens when your drive cracks and you lost 3TB of HD movies, music, pictures, etc, and all your collections saved since you were born or something...????
Ever heard of this wonderful technology called RAID?
Posted on Reply
#27
air_ii
FourstaffEver heard of this wonderful technology called RAID?
Well, with RAID offering more security, I still wouldn't call it a backup. Besides, they're yet to invent a RAID controller for USB drives ;).
Posted on Reply
#28
Mussels
Freshwater Moderator
air_iiWell, with RAID offering more security, I still wouldn't call it a backup. Besides, they're yet to invent a RAID controller for USB drives ;).
they've been using RAID internally in USB flash drives and external USB enclosures for HDD's for years. Hell, its an inherent tech in SSD's as well - two modules RAID'ed together invisibly to the sytem = fast SSD/flash drive.
Posted on Reply
#29
Static~Charge
FourstaffEver heard of this wonderful technology called RAID?
RAID is for speed, capacity, and/or redundancy. It is not a substitute for a backup.
Posted on Reply
#30
Unregistered
yeah, i remember playing dragon lair games that use 6 Floppy disk :eek:

btw why seagate didn't release internal 3,5 inch HDD first ?
Static~ChargeRAID is for speed, capacity, and/or redundancy. It is not a substitute for a backup.
not really if you use RAID0 or RAID5
Posted on Edit | Reply
#31
pr0n Inspector
wahdangunyeah, i remember playing dragon lair games that use 6 Floppy disk :eek:

btw why seagate didn't release internal 3,5 inch HDD first ?



not really if you use RAID0 or RAID5
RAID0 for capacity and speed. RAID 5 for capacity and some redundancy. Your problem?
Posted on Reply
#32
HillBeast
pr0n InspectorRAID0 for capacity and speed. RAID 5 for capacity and some redundancy. Your problem?
He meant RAID'5 is usable as a form of backup.
Posted on Reply
#33
DaedalusHelios
newtekie1So? They raise the price $20(and I'm being generious assuming that is their cost for the USB3.0 base minus the cost of the USB2.0 base) and advertise it as USB3.0 right out of the box. Even those without USB3.0 will pay the $20 for USB3.0 even if they are going to use it with USB2.0.
Yeah it would separate it from the pack with that feature out of the box. I still have no USB 3.0 devices myself. :laugh:
Posted on Reply
#34
newtekie1
Semi-Retired Folder
RAID1 essentially IS a backup. All your data is stored on two seperate drives, any data written to one, is written instantly to the second. This is better than just backing it up to a second drive every few weeks, wouldn't you say?

RAID0 is the exact opposite of a backup. It actually puts your data at a higher risk of loss.

RAID5/6 is not a substitute for a real backup. However, it is better than no backup at all.
Posted on Reply
#35
air_ii
Musselsthey've been using RAID internally in USB flash drives and external USB enclosures for HDD's for years. Hell, its an inherent tech in SSD's as well - two modules RAID'ed together invisibly to the sytem = fast SSD/flash drive.
I'm well aware of that, but that's not what I was referring to. Since the article was about a drive connected via USB (which I have a feeling everyone forgot ;)), I was talking about a RAID controller that would allow you to connect USB hard drives to it.
newtekie1RAID1 essentially IS a backup. All your data is stored on two seperate drives, any data written to one, is written instantly to the second. This is better than just backing it up to a second drive every few weeks, wouldn't you say?

RAID0 is the exact opposite of a backup. It actually puts your data at a higher risk of loss.

RAID5/6 is not a substitute for a real backup. However, it is better than no backup at all.
RAID1 does protect you fully from a single drive failure, but it does not from electric shock (thunderstorm or PSU failure), which might smoke all your HDDs at the same time. That's what I meant by saying it's not a real backup.
Posted on Reply
#36
newtekie1
Semi-Retired Folder
air_iiI'm well aware of that, but that's not what I was referring to. Since the article was about a drive connected via USB (which I have a feeling everyone forgot ;)), I was talking about a RAID controller that would allow you to connect USB hard drives to it.
It doesn't need to be connected to a RAID controller to be used in RAID.
air_iiRAID1 does protect you fully from a single drive failure, but it does not from electric shock (thunderstorm or PSU failure), which might smoke all your HDDs at the same time. That's what I meant by saying it's not a real backup.
Generally, if you are talking about using an external drive as backup, and the external drive is connected to the same power source as the PC(and they almost always are), then a lightning strike that takes out the computer and all the drive inside will also take out the external. Of course a solution to this is buying a good UPS, then you don't have to worry about the internal drives at all. A good PSU helps also.;)

You could use optical media as storage, but those degrade over time and have a very limitted number of uses, and becomes quite expensive. I would be looking at 400+ DVDs to back up my 2TB+ of data, that isn't practical.
Posted on Reply
#37
Kreij
Senior Monkey Moderator
RAID1 essentially IS a backup.
No it's not. It's replication of the current state of the hard drive to protect against a single HDD failure. File corruption and deletions are replicated on both drives and something you cannot recover from unless you have .. a backup. :)
Posted on Reply
#38
Disparia
^ That's generally how I view it. Could have 1 drive, could have X drives in RAID-51 with hot spares, but it's not a backup.
Posted on Reply
#39
newtekie1
Semi-Retired Folder
KreijNo it's not. It's replication of the current state of the hard drive to protect against a single HDD failure. File corruption and deletions are replicated on both drives and something you cannot recover from unless you have .. a backup. :)
Fair enough.
Posted on Reply
#40
Mussels
Freshwater Moderator
KreijNo it's not. It's replication of the current state of the hard drive to protect against a single HDD failure. File corruption and deletions are replicated on both drives and something you cannot recover from unless you have .. a backup. :)
thanks, you beat me to it. its really hard to get across to people that RAID is not a backup and never will be, and that it only protects against drive failure (not corruption/deletion)
Posted on Reply
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