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Seagate launches 8TB enterprise hard drives

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Seagate's 8 terabyte hard drive for enterprises.

Seagate is unveiling a whole family of 8-terabyte hard disk drives for enterprise applications. The new drives will address markets such as enterprise computers, network-attached storage, and “kinetic hard disk drives.”

The aim is to lower the total cost of ownership for storage in a variety of markets. The Cupertino, Calif.-based storage giant is targeting everyone from small businesses to large enterprises with the portfolio of 8TB drives.

“Customers today need storage solutions to support a diverse, and sometimes very specialized, set of applications and workload requirements,” said Scott Horn, vice president of marketing at Seagate, in a statement. “In designing our products, we look closely at the type of data being stored, performance needs, power requirements, environmental operating conditions, network topologies, uptime demand and more, to ensure our customers receive the right storage technology for the job. This thoughtful approach has enabled us to deliver the most compelling 8TB portfolio available in the industry.”

The first product is a 3.5-inch hard disk drive with 8TB of capacity. The performance is 100 percent higher than the random read/write performance of the previous generation of 6TB drives. Supermicro said it will have a line of storage equipment available using the Seagate drives.

Seagate is also launching its enterprise network-attached storage (NAS HDD) for small businesses that plan on growing rapidly. The product is more densely packed into a tower or rack-mount solution, and it has lower overall power consumption, as well.

And Seagate is launching its latest Kinetic HDD, or hard drives for cloud data centers that need to access storage at extremely high speeds. The Kinetic devices allow computers to access data quickly, without going through lots of layers of software. Seagate estimates the overall cost savings from the Kinetic drives to be about 70 percent. A terabyte has 1,000 gigabytes, or a thousand billion bytes of storage.

In a conference call with the press, Seagate product marketing manager Joni Clark said that by 2020,  44 zettabytes (ZB) of data will be created globally, and 13 ZB will need to be stored. Only about 6.5 ZB will be available to handle that capacity, Clark said.

“That’s a huge amount, and most of that data will live in the cloud,” Clark said. “We can’t build enough storage capacity to store 13 zettabytes.”

Seagate has shipped 2.4 billion drives to date, or 17 percent more than its nearest competitor, according to STX market research. The drives are shipping at future dates.

 

 

 

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A spy drive? Seagate launches 8-terabyte drive for surveillance apps

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Seagate's 8-terabyte Surveillance hard disk drive.

Seagate is launching an eight-terabyte hard disk drive for security applications. Equally interesting is where the company is doing this. The storage giant unveiled its Seagate Surveillance HDD at the China Public Security Expo 2015 in Shenzhen, China.

China has a huge appetite for storage since it conducts so much surveillance on behalf of its government and military. China is thus a natural market for Seagate’s biggest hard disk drives. But demand for data is exploding. IBM estimates that 90 percent of the world’s data was created in just the last two years.

Surveillance ranks high in terms of applications for storage, as it takes a lot of hard drives to store video from ubiquitous surveillance cameras. Seagate is targeting surveillance system integrators, end users, and system installers.

“Seagate has worked closely with the top surveillance manufacturers to evolve the features of our Surveillance HDD products and deliver a customized solution that has precisely matched market needs in this evolving space for the last 10 years,” said Matt Rutledge, Seagate’s senior vice president of client storage, in a statement.

 

 

Seagate ships its 10-terabyte helium-filled enterprise hard disk drive

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Seagate's 10-terabyte hard disk drive.

Seagate announced it is shipping a 10-terabyte helium-filled hard disk drive for enterprise customers.

The new 3.5-inch hard disk — Seagate’s first such drive — is targeted at the growing storage requirements for private and public cloud-based data centers.

Western Digital, archrival of the Cupertino, Calif.-based Seagate, started shipping its own 10-terabyte hard drive in December. Seagate’s customers for the new drive include Huawei and Alibaba, two of China’s tech giants.

“Cloud-based data center storage needs are expanding faster than many current infrastructures can sustain, rendering the capacity demands of users a herculean task for cloud managers,” said Mark Re, senior vice president and chief technology officer at Seagate, in a statement. “Built on our years of research and development of sealed-drive technology, our new helium-based enterprise drive is designed precisely to help data-centric organizations worldwide solve the needs of their growing storage business.”

The drive is a modern marvel. It has seven platters and 14 heads, and the drive seals in helium to create a quiet, turbulence-free environment, decreasing both friction and resistance on the platters and delivering a low power-per-terabyte ratio. It has 25 percent more density than past drives. Customers from Alibaba and Huawei have said that they can get better storage capacity and lower power usage in the data center.

“At-scale data centers are faced with the challenge of efficiently storing massive amounts of unstructured digital data,” said John Rydning, vice president and analyst at market researcher IDC. “Seagate’s new 10TB HDD for enterprise data centers is its first product to employ helium technology and will help data center customers to expand storage capacity economically.”

 

 

 

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Seagate increases job cut plans to 6,500, though hard drive sales remain strong

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Seagate's 10-terabyte hard disk drive.

Seagate announced today that it is increasing planned layoffs from 1,600 to 6,500 positions, as the hard drive maker tries to navigate a global decline in PC sales.

Just two weeks ago, the company revealed the original job cut plans. But in a fourth quarter earnings preview, executives decided to up that figure. The new 6,500 job cuts amounts to 14 percent of the company’s global workforce.

In the earnings preview for its fourth quarter, the company said it will report revenue of $2.65 billion and gross margins of 25 percent. That’s better than Seagate’s own forecast of $2.3 billion and margins of 23 percent. The company said it will ship 37 million hard drives.

Despite the positive quarter, Seagate is apparently bracing itself for a tough long-term outlook.

“The evolution of mobile and cloud data driven environments continues to define itself as requiring significant amounts of mass storage,” said Steve Luczo, chairman and CEO of Seagate, in a statement. “Seagate will continue to evolve its product offering, technology investment and manufacturing footprint to best serve our customers.”

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Seagate launches a 512GB SSD drive for Xbox One

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Seagate's 512GB SSD drive for Xbox One.

Seagate is launching a new 512-gigabyte SDD drive for the Xbox One game console. The company’s emphasis will be on fast booting and loading.

Big hard drives and extra storage are a must for most hardcore players, as the average game takes up about 35 gigabytes of data. At that size, it doesn’t take long to fill up a hard drive.

The Seagate Game Drive for Xbox SSD uses flash storage to improve the gaming experience. Helping people get into the action quicker, the Seagate Game Drive reduces waiting at welcome screens and enables quicker transitions between levels in top titles like Forza Horizon 3 and Gears of War 4.

With limited console internal drive capacity and game install sizes continuing to increase, players are looking for ways to expand storage. With 512GB of capacity, the Seagate Game Drive lets gamers store approximately 15 of their favorite titles and downloadable content. Individuals can archive less frequently played games on their console and keep a huge library of releases at their fingertips on the drive.

Seagate Game Drive features easy setup and installation. The sleek and stylish aluminum enclosure also complements the Xbox ecosystem. It doesn’t need a power cable, and its compact size makes it perfect for bringing to a friend’s house. Seagate previously launched a 2-terabyte and 4-terabyte external hard drive for the Xbox One in 2015.

The Seagate Game Drive for Xbox SSD will sell for $200, and it will be available in November at Amazon, GameStop, and other consumer-electronics retailers.

Cows and data centers: What HP’s chief engineer thinks about fusing the real world with technology

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Chandrakant Patel is an HP senior fellow and chief engineer. He is at HP's original garage headquarters.

Chandrakant Patel has a deep history working on hardware and fundamental science at Hewlett-Packard, and he has used that background to create a vision for the future of technology that combines the physical and digital worlds.

He hopes to inspire his fellow HP colleagues and the rest of the tech world on a new decades-long path. Patel is a senior fellow and the chief engineer at Hewlett-Packard. That’s an important and rare position, as HP has more than 50,000 employees in 170 countries, with many thousands of engineers. I met Patel at the 50th anniversary of HP Labs in Palo Alto, and we caught up for an interview after that event at a very special place for HP employees: the original garage at a home on Addison Street in Palo Alto, Calif., where HP was born in 1939.

Patel’s job is to inspire HP’s engineers to be creative when thinking about the big technology problems they must overcome. After all, Moore’s Law — or doubling the number of transistors on a chip every couple of years — doesn’t just happen. It is the result of a lot of smart people figuring out the toughest technical problems of the day. Patel believes that we still have to figure out a much more energy efficient world network, with intelligent devices at the edge that don’t drain resources out of the data centers.

We talked about why he chose to stay with the PC and printer maker, HP, rather than HP Enterprise, the services company, after last year’s split-up. And we reminisced about HP’s past, including the creation of its first computer 50 years ago this week. Patel is very passionate about how students should study the fundamentals of science — and both hardware and software — to prepare themselves for the age of the Internet of Things. He prefers to call this the “cyber physical” applications, which expose the seams between hardware and software, between the real world and the digital.

We chatted there so that we could get inspired about the history of technology and where it’s going in the future. Here’s an edited transcript of our conversation. I’ve also added many of Patel’s slides, as he loves to paint his ideas of the future by making sketches.

The future is cyber physical.

Above: The future is cyber physical.

Image Credit: HP

Chandrakant Patel: I’m a mechanical engineer. I started at an interesting time in Silicon Valley. My first interview was with a company called Dysan. It was on Patrick Henry Drive. Patrick Henry was brand new. Now the stadium is very close to it. They were making disks. Heads and media were done here. I got a job at Memorex, where Nvidia is now located.

A long time ago, Memorex had that commercial – “Is it live or is it Memorex?” Ella Fitzgerald would shatter a glass with the frequency of her voice. They’d copy it to a Memorex tape, and then playing back the tape would shatter the glass too.

The reason it’s important to me is it was a prime time commercial. People understood why the glass broke. People understood physical fundamentals, back in the early ‘80s. I found myself in what I called the “valley of tinkerers.” Memorex had its share. Al Shugart, Finis Conner. They went on to create Seagate. We had manufacturing and design there.

I was making drives where the mass was 100 kilograms. A gigabyte would cost $100,000 and it was the size of a washing machine. Because the mass was very high and the stiffness was low, the frequency, the characteristic frequency of the drive was low. Low-frequency vibrations could damage it. As mechanical engineers we had interesting problems to solve.

VentureBeat: It was an age of physical hardware.

Patel: Very much so. Understanding how physical hardware worked. Discs were rotating at 3600 RPM, 32 heads, how do you keep them flying? Then one thing I noticed was, as the hardware got smaller, the drives got smaller, I felt the stiffness was going up. The mass went down. The ratio of stiffness to mass goes [up] and the natural frequency goes up. They’re less susceptible to those low-frequency vibrations. It was simple first-order fundamentals-based thinking to see that drives would be commoditized.

I reset myself, after working on large drives and small drives. I joined HP Labs in 1991 to work on the PA-RISC chip. We were going from wire bonds to the flip chip to get a lot more I/Os out of the chip. I established the chip packing and thermal management. I did a lot of work on electronics cooling. That’s when I got to know Bill. Subsequently I felt that chips would come from one or two places. As you scale down you need volume.

Chandrakant Patel is an HP senior fellow and chief engineer. He is standing at HP's original garage headquarters.

Above: Chandrakant Patel is an HP senior fellow and chief engineer. He is standing at HP’s original garage headquarters.

Image Credit: Dean Takahashi

I moved out into systems, working on large-scale systems like Superdome, the supercomputer-class systems we were building. In the mid-’90s I went to my boss and said, “The data center is the computer. The building is the computer.” I filled a room with racks that I said would be about 10 kilowatts, filled with industry-standard components. Now the building is the value add, not the servers. It is the networking, the cooling, the power—power, ping, and pipe. Those three Ps would determine the data center and the total cost of ownership of a data center is driven by energy.

My boss said, “Why do you want to work on facilities?” My contention was, it’s Carnegie Hall with 150 people per seat. A person is 100 watts. A rack would be 15 kilowatts. That’s 150 people in a seat. Imagine that. You have to deal with fluid flow and so on. We created the smart data center project. We build a data center with sensors and controls. We built the dynamic control systems for it. We were the first ones to do that.

We went on to build Eco pods. That started because of a conversation with a customer of ours. The customer had underground mines. My recommendation was to put data centers in containers and lower them into the ground. The region where they were, the ground was nine degrees Celsius. I said, “Let’s dump heat into the ground.” That didn’t happen. I wish it had, but the dot-com boom and bust happened at that moment. Otherwise that would have been one of the most secure places in the world.

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Seagate targets 4-terabyte storage drive at Xbox Game Pass members

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Microsoft has launched a subscription service, Xbox Game Pass, with more than 100 games for $10 a month. And to help you store all of those games, Seagate is launching two new hard disk drives as extra storage for the Xbox One or the Xbox 360 game consoles.

The Seagate Game Drive for Xbox Game Pass Special Edition also has a special promotional deal. Seagate’s 2-terabyte hard drive sells for $90 and includes a one-month membership for Xbox Game Pass. The 4-terabyte hard drive sells for $130 and it comes with a two-month Xbox Game Pass membership.

Seagate said that gamers won’t have to worry about deleting a lot of games and waste a lot of time on re-downloads every time they decide to play an older game again. The drives plug directly into any USB port on the console. And with USB 3.0 connectivity, the experience with the external storage should be just like playing a game on the console’s internal drive. The console automatically detects the drive and walks a user through a setup process that takes a few minutes.

Gamers can take their favorite games and the hottest titles from the Xbox Game Pass catalog along with them—wherever. They can unplug the Seagate Game Drive and take an entire game library to a friend’s house.

Seagate Game Drive Hub for Xbox One stores eight terabytes of games for $200

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Now that’s a lot of storage. Seagate is announcing today that the Seagate Game Drive Hub for Xbox has eight terabytes of storage for your games on the Xbox One game console.

The $200 hub has eight terabytes as well as a multi-purpose USB hub for players who have massive game libraries. The peripheral was designed in partnership with Microsoft’s Xbox team.

It goes along with Microsoft’s own strategy for getting a lot of games in the hands of gamers. Microsoft’s Xbox Game Pass is a subscription that gives gamers access to 100 games for $10 a month.

The Seagate Game Drive Hub for Xbox works seamlessly with any console in the Xbox One family of devices (Xbox One, Xbox One S, and Project Scorpio). It has room for roughly 200 games (average game size is 35 gigabytes to 50 gigabytes) on 8 terabytes. Now you won’t have to delete your old games when you install new ones.

It has dual quick-access USB 3.0 ports. You can also connect other Xbox One accessories, such as steering wheels and even other Game Drives. The drive installs and connects automatically when you plug it in.


Seagate launches 4TB hard drive for the PlayStation 4

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Seagate has doubled the capacity of its latest hard drive and is announcing a 4 terabyte drive for the Sony PlayStation 4. The Seagate Game Drive can store more than 100 games. Available today, it sells at retail for $130. The external storage device has about eight times the 500GB drive that comes with a PS4. The Game Drive’s USB 3.0 connection ha…Read More

Seagate adds storage for drones and other mobile devices

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Seagate Technology announced a range of new mobile storage products — including storage for drones — based on its Seagate and LaCie brands at CES 2018, the big tech trade show in Las Vegas this week. The products are aimed at the world’s increasingly mobile population with solutions that solve key challenges they face when creatin…Read More

GamesBeat Weekly Roundup

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If you follow VentureBeat but don’t regularly check our GamesBeat site, here’s a list of the best games stories we ran over the last seven days that you may have missed. This week, game developer 38 Studios laid off its entire staff after ongoing financial troubles, BioWare laid off a number of people working on Star Wars the Old Republic, Take-Two…Read More

IBM will use blockchain to prevent counterfeiting of Seagate’s hard drives

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Seagate
Seagate Technology and IBM have teamed up to use blockchain technology to reduce the counterfeiting of hard disk drives.Read More

Seagate Game Drive for Xbox SSD — How to cut loading times in half

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The Game Drive SSD looks really slick.
Seagate's external SSD is super fast, which makes a huge difference for loading game data. The problem is the price. So, is it worth it?Read More

Thin, fast, and big capacity: Seagate launches a little backup drive that can store 4 terabytes of data

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Seagate is taking personal storage to new heights as it announces its Backup Plus Fast portable drive with 4 terabytes of data in a small black box. The box has twice the capacity and speed of existing external portable backup drives. The storage giant is making the announcements at the 2014 International CES, the huge tech trade show this week in…Read More

For super-fast laptops, Seagate launches next-generation hybrid flash/hard drive

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Seagate is now shipping a second-generation drive that combines chip-based flash memory with a mechanical hard disk. The combination results in a high-speed, high-capacity drive for laptops and the fastest personal computers. The hybrid technology is innovative because it combines the speed of flash chips with the low-cost and high storage capacity…Read More

Seagate gives you new entertainment choices with 4G LTE storage

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Seagate is announcing today that it is teaming up with Verizon Wireless to create the first 4G LTE mobile wireless storage devices for use with smartphones and tablets. The devices use 4G LTE mobile networking to connect to the internet from any location and essentially allow you to add huge amounts of storage to your mobile device. Using the wirel…Read More

Seagate agrees to acquire LaCie for at least $186M

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Seagate said it plans to acquire a controlling stake in Paris-based storage making LaCie for at least $186 million. Seagate, already one of the world’s largest hard drive makers, will buy the French maker of high-end storage equipment for consumers. Seagate will buy a 64.5 percent stake from LaCie’s founder, Philippe Spruch, for 4.05 eu…Read More

Funding Daily: Dancing on my own

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I love to dance. This does not mean I am good at it. Sure I used to take jazz and hip hop classes at summer camp and swung dance myself into a tizzy at Bar and Bat Mitzvahs, but I wouldn’t exactly call myself a “good dancer.” Still, I couldn’t conduct important research for my article on ChaCha’s round of funding witho…Read More

Seagate moves deeper into flash memory as it launches consumer solid-state drives alongside enterprise line-up

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Seagate was born many decades ago as a pioneer in hard disk drives, which are now generating $10 billion a year in revenue for the company. But now it is launching its own line of flash memory-based storage devices that mark a strategic shift for the company and the storage industry. Seagate first announced its move into flash, or solid-state drive…Read More

Seagate dresses up its backup drives with cloth and puts 5 terabytes in your palm

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Seagate's latest Backup Plus drives.
Seagate Technology announced a range of new mobile storage products based on its Seagate and LaCie brands at CES 2019, the big tech trade show in Las Vegas.Read More
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