Following closely to its
recent announcement of perpendicular magnetic recording (PMR) Cheetah
drives, Seagate has dropped another bombshell with the rollout of a
single-disc 750GB external drive based on the same technology.
Conventional
longitudinal recording technology lays
data bits flat on the disc as opposed to PMR which makes bits stand on
end. In the past, longitudinal recording technology was subject to a
force called superparamagnetic effect that might result in bits
flipping and corrupting data. This is not an issue with PMR devices.
Moreover, by standing the bits, more data units can be fitted on a
disc, giving up to 10 times more storage capacity. This is similar to
cramming more people on a train
by removing the seats and providing standing space only.
Despite
the increasing interest in flash-based hard drives, the high-density
and cost-per-MB of PMR-based storage cannot be easily dismissed. The
huge capacity offered by PMR devices is a match made in heaven for the
large storage demands required by high-definition videos and
increasingly sophisticated editing software.