largest capacity available
The LaCie Bigger Disk, with the largest hard drive capacity available, is a unique innovation that packs an amazing 1 terabyte of storage space in a manageable 5.25" form factor. With this unsurpassed storage capacity, the LaCie Bigger Disk allows users to store nearly two years of continuous music and up to one month of non-stop MPEG-2 video1. Truly plug and play, this device requires no driver or software installation for Windows XP and Mac OS X users.
http://www.lacie.com/products/product.htm?id=10118
Try StreamFab Downloader and download from Netflix, Amazon, Youtube! Or Try DVDFab and copy Blu-rays! or rip iTunes movies!
+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 9 of 9
Thread
-
"Each problem that I solved became a rule which served afterwards to solve other problems." - Rene Descartes (1596-1650)
-
amazing that hard drives have reached that size, but I'd never keep that much info on just one drive. I've had too many crash to fall for that again and lose everything. I'd rather spread it out over some 120's or 200's at the most.
Can you imagine having to wait for that thing to defragment??? -
Only one month of non-stop video. I need more. I agree, the defrag and the formating would take forever. Of course, the market is out there. Imagine what a selling point that would be for a TIVO box. Kind of shows where the video media is going. If only we could get super high speed internet connections to be able to download video fast enough to fill up this kind of drive. Fiber optics to every home. Maybe next year.
-
Price is right. I want one! 8)
Want my help? Ask here! (not via PM!)
FAQs: Best Blank Discs • Best TBCs • Best VCRs for capture • Restore VHS -
If you figure 5 gigs per DVD quality movie, that's 200 movies, and if you figure <2 hours per movie, thats less than 400 hours, and if you figure there are 168 hours in a week, that's a little more than 2 and 1/3 weeks of "non-stop video".
Must be using SVCDs.
I don't think I want to lose that much data at once, either..
Be a bitch to backup to DVD, though, wouldn't it? 200 disks +?
And it's 5 1/4 form factor, goes into a CD bay, 1 fewer optical devices.
And we'd need several burners to back it up in any reasonable amount of time.
I'll betcha it comes out at more than 5 200s would cost.
And can you imagine the random access seek times?
I'll pass.
Cheers,
George -
Taken from BJ_M's link.
$1,199.00
1 TB*
Item Number : 300875
Interface : FireWire 800, FireWire 400 and Hi-Speed USB 2.0
Rotational Speed (rpm) : 7200
Interface Transfer Rate : FireWire 800: 800 Mbits/s (100MB/s)
FireWire 400: 400 Mbits/s (50MB/s)
USB 2.0: 480Mbits/s (60MB/s)
Max sustained transfer rate : FireWire 800: up to 55MB/s
FireWire 400: up to 35MB/s
USB 2.0: up to 34MB/s**
Average seek time (write) : 10 ms
Buffer : 8 MB
Size : 6.3 x 3.4 x 10.6 in. / 173 x 88 268 mm (LxWxH)
Weight : 11.02 lbs. / 5000g
System Requirements : FireWire 800 (9-pin)-equipped computer: Mac OS 10.2.4 and greater; Windows 2000 and Windows XP
computer equipped with FireWire 400 (6-pin) or iLink (4-pin): Mac OS 9.x and Mac OS 10.x; Windows 98 SE, Windows 2000, Windows Me and Windows XP
USB 2.0-equipped computer: Mac OS 10.2.x and greater, Windows 2000 and Windows XP
USB 1.1-equipped computer: Mac OS 9.x and Mac OS 10.x, Windows 2000 and Windows XP
Intel Pentium II 350MHz-compatible or Apple G3 processor and greater
minimum 64MB RAM
Box Contents : LaCie Storage Utilities CD-ROM, FireWire 800 to FireWire 800 (9-to-9 pin) cable, FireWire 400 to FireWire 400 (6-to-6 pin) cable, iLink/DV 6-to-4 pin cable, Hi-Speed USB 2.0 cable (USB 1.1 compatible), Drive stand for upright desktop use, External power supply
Comments : * 1 terabyte = 1,000,000,000,000 bytes. Once formatted, the actual available storage capacity varies depending on operating environment.
** Depends on the computer configuration.
*** Apple G4 processor required for use with FireWire 800
So, yes George, you are right. It does cost more than 5 200GB hard drives.
SLICK RICKOriginally Posted by lordsmurf -
Rick,
And it's external, big, like an old SCSI drive I have, and heavy.
Being external makes it a better deal, when the price comes down, and it will, bye 'm bye.
And, it's one trillion bytes, not 1024 X 1024>>> etc.. Damn them and their marketing hype.
Still, think I'll stick to maybe the 250s when they drop a little mote.
Almost did buy one a couple weeks ago, like 170 bucks, after rebate, and with a combination SATA/ATA133 card. Be kickin' myself sometime down the road when I run out of room on this machine, only got 460 gigs total.
Rebate was way too much for me at the time, like 120 bucks.
Cheers,
George -
thats amazing.
but its a little too mucj space, for me at least.
i'd rather have a 200gb and backup to media when needed -
Originally Posted by redwudz
Though i am highly sceptical, but i can wish can't i?
http://blogcritics.org/archives/2003/11/18/083344.php
Salt Lake City and other Utah cities are looking to build the largest ultrahigh-speed digital network in the country. Excellent.
I would bet that the basic speed would be at least t1 speeds.
Similar Threads
-
DVD player to connect to a PC hard drive, or a networked hard drive?
By lifengwu in forum DVD & Blu-ray PlayersReplies: 0Last Post: 8th Oct 2010, 19:40 -
SATA, Hard Drive, Desktop only picking up part of the hard drive?
By Ghtpua in forum ComputerReplies: 9Last Post: 16th May 2010, 18:46 -
Sony Vaio with partitioned hard drive(Want full hard drive space on C)
By neworldman in forum ComputerReplies: 11Last Post: 17th Mar 2010, 13:42 -
Hard-Drive write caching,Is my hard drive faulty
By jezzer in forum ComputerReplies: 33Last Post: 27th Sep 2008, 11:06 -
Do you have a terabyte hard drive yet?
By yoda313 in forum PollsReplies: 28Last Post: 5th Jan 2008, 20:19