10 Weird Flash DrivesApril 9th, 2009 Weirdness has no limits. While we being gadgetophilics have always tried to bring in the serious and most useful products to you first, fun and crazy samples have come running close.
10 Most Useful External Hard DrivesApril 6th, 2009 Hard drives used to be one that comes with the computer a decade ago. People wouldn't care about it unless its crashed.
Samsung CD ROM Drive: Worst BuyOctober 15th, 2005 I have 5 PC's equipped with Samsung 52X (Max) CD-ROM Drives for around 2 years. It was a horrible mistake to make.
Terabyte Thumb Drive For EveryoneNovember 8th, 2007 Researchers at Arizona State University have developed a low-cost (1/10 of Flash memory), low-power (1/1000 times more energy efficient as Flash memory) computer memory that could put terabyte-sized thumb drives in consumers' pockets within a few years. "A thumb drive using our memory could store a terabyte of information," says Michael Kozicki, director of ASU's Center for Applied Nanoionics.
SATA vs PATA Hard Disk Drives: A GuideMarch 4th, 2009 With the advent of new SATA drives, as you probably know, there was a big naming issue. The old IDE drives needed a name to distinguish it from SATA drives and so the name PATA was born.
Samsung Laptop Replaces Hard Disk with Flash MemoryMay 24th, 2006 Samsung Electronics said that it will launch a laptop computer and a "ultra-computing device," in early June. In these devices the hard drives will be replaced with 32 gigabytes of NAND flash memory.
10 Coolest Retro GadgetsApril 14th, 2009 They say old is gold. But with gadgets, we don't really pay heed to that isn't it? Newer the better.
Terabyte Disk Drives From Seagate (& Samsung)June 26th, 2007 Seagate announced availability of Terabyte disk drives at 7200 rpm; separate models targeted for enterprise and consumer desktops. The enterprise drives features serial attached SCSI interface option.
World's Smallest DVD Writer LaunchedAugust 25th, 2006 Plextor launched what it claims as the world's smallest DVD writer, a slim external unit aimed at notebook users. It weighs 250g, 1.6cm high and barely bigger than a CD.
An Analysis between SATA, PATA and SCSIMay 13th, 2009 To start geeky things with a straight face (:|), let's get familiar with the full name of the gentlemen we are going to discuss about. PATA stands for Parallel Advanced Technology Attachment, SATA means Serial Advanced Technology Attachment and SCSI is Small Computer System Interface.
Seagate Constellation - World's Highest Capacity and Power- Efficient SED Hard DrivesFebruary 3rd, 2009 Seagate (NASDAQ:STX) today introduced its Constellation™ family of new enterprise storage solutions for Tier-2 nearline storage applications. The two new drive models, the 2.5-inch Constellation and the 3.5-inch Constellation ES hard drives, include a combination of features that enable high capacities, increased power efficiency, enterprise-class reliability, and data security.
Comparison of Software RAID on Windows versus LinuxFebruary 18th, 2007 The basic idea of RAID (Redundant Arrays of Inexpensive Disks) is to combine multiple small, independent disk drives into an array of disk drives which yields performance and recoverability exceeding that of a Single Large Expensive Drive (SLED). Redundancy is also provided (unless RAID 0) which allows easy and often automatic recovery from hard disk crash.
Seagate Teams up with McAfee, Ships Self-Encrypting DriveNovember 26th, 2008 Powerful, easy-to-use notebook data security is increasingly important as the global adoption of mobile PCs continues to soar and more notebooks are used to store sensitive personal and business information. Lost or stolen notebooks can cost companies millions of dollars in compromised proprietary information and threaten consumers with the high cost of identity theft, yet many computers remain unprotected.
FAT32 versus NTFS: What Should You ChooseOctober 8th, 2006 When installing Windows 2000 or Windows XP, you have to decide the evergreen question: Should I choose FAT32 or NTFS and why? Today I will try to answer it once and for all. Note: I haven't discussed FAT file system because it is very much obsolete with todays high volume hard-disks.
Making iPhone SmoothieJuly 11th, 2007 I never thought I would see an iPhone smoothie. Ah well, never say never again.