Posted on 04 May 2007 by admin

Nah, WiebeTech’s latest RAID enclosures can’t quite offer up the internal storage capacity seen on Novac’s iterations, but the RT5 and RT5e still pack an awful lot of capacity with a handle on top. The RT5 packs a nice variety of connection options, as users will find twin FireWire 800 ports along with one eSATA and USB 2.0 connector to boot, and there should be enough room in there to cram “up to 2TB” of HDDs for on-the-go redundancy. The RT5e differs ever-so-slightly by giving us the means to stuff five 750GB IDE drives in the case, leaving you with up to 3.75TB of space to read / write on via the sole eSATA jack. The enclosures sport five reloadable, lockable drive trays, a rugged exterior that shouldn’t suffer from minor bumps and bruises, and while an empty rendition will run you $1,699.95, WiebeTech will gladly sell ‘em pre-populated for anywhere from $2,259.95 to a steep $4,149.95 depending on drive selections.
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from engadget
Posted on 03 May 2007 by admin

We know, no one likes paying extra for those built-in backup features that you reckon are just as easily handled by your own diligence, but TrekStor‘s latest external hard drive boasts even more fanciness for your hard-earned buck. Aside from coming bundled with Nero’s BackItUp2 Essentials, the dashing aluminum drive packs an infrared remote, AV adapter, USB 2.0 connectivity, and a front-panel full of media-centric playback controls for times when the remote mysteriously vanishes. The unit was designed to capture your video files, pictures, and other multimedia, and then plug right in to any television for instant, painless viewing / listening. Additionally, it plays nice with OS X, Linux, and nearly every flavor of Windows, and handles MPEG1/2/4, AVI, DivX, XviD, MP3, WMA, WAV, and OGG file formats all on its own. HD freaks aren’t forgotten either, as 720p / 1080i is also in the cards thanks to its component output capabilities, and the optical digital audio output can even pipe surround sound from the HDD to your AV system. The MovieStation maxi t.u comes in 250GB, 320GB, 400GB, and half terabyte sizes, but unfortunately, no pricing deets were readily available just yet. [Warning: PDF read link]
[Via SvartLinks]
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from engadget
Posted on 26 April 2007 by admin

While we’ve already seen that a four-barrel SD-to-SSD adapter will run you a stiff $258.50 sans flash cards, users who can’t seem to find a good use for those CompactFlash cards that used to rule to roost in your recently replaced Nikon D70 finally have a solution. The much more reasonable CF-to-SATA hard drive adapter simply takes any CompactFlash I/II card and snaps it into the 2.5-inch SATA HDD slot on the bottom of most lappies. The device then allows the CF card to be recognized as an “ordinary hard drive” which can even be “configured as a boot device” without any additional drivers. Moreover, it supports DMA and Ultra DMA modes, and is said play nice with just about every flavor of Windows dating back to 3.1, Linux, and OS X operating systems. The best bit, however, is the attainable price, as we could certainly see ourselves forking over $35.99 just to see how a CF boot drive would really effect performance.
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from engadget
Posted on 25 April 2007 by admin
Shortly after releasing a 16GB SSD for ExpressCard slots, Transcend is joining SanDisk and TDK (among others) in the cost-effective 32GB arena. The company’s 32GB 2.5-inch IDE solid state disc sports a “tough outer metal case,” anti-shock features, “no moving parts,” and the lower power consumption we’ve come to expect from these guys. The drive clocks in at just 7.4-millimeters thick and even touts built-in ECC (Error Correction Code) functionality that purportedly “ensures highly reliable data transfer and increases your systems energy efficiency.” Unfortunately, the firm hasn’t divulged details just yet around pricing, but we do know that an 8GB (TS8GSSD25) and 16GB (TS16GSSD25) flavor will be sitting alongside the 32GB TS32GSSD25 right about now.
[Via PCLaunches]
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from engadget
Posted on 25 April 2007 by admin

We already crunched the numbers: 1TB is a lot. And if you’ve got $399 to blow, it can be all yours, with Hitachi saying Deskstar 7K1000 shipments have reached “critical mass” this month, after starting out scarce in March. We’re guessing if you need one terabyte of data, in a 3.5-inch enclosure, spinning at 7,200 RPM and hooked up to your computer / RAID / iPod, you know who you are, so we won’t spend any more time extolling the 7K1000′s virtues — quit your drooling and buy, buy, buy!
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Posted on 15 February 2007 by admin

Funny thing how NAS disk capacity and DRM hacks possess a near linear relationship, eh? Meet Buffalo’s new 3TB (yeah, 3,000GB) TeraStation PRO storage solution for your home network. It’s still the same ol’ box — RAID 1/5/10 (across 4x disks), 38MB/s transfer rate (Raid 5), gigabit Ethernet, Active Directory integration, integrated UPS and 2x USB 2.0 jacks to swing even more disk from. And with 1TB drives ready to pop, a 4TB model is just around the corner. The TS-H3.0TGL/R5 is already up for pre-order in Japan for Â¥277,305 or about $2,312 of the green after you hunt the beast down. NASty indeed.
[Via Impress]
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from engadget
Posted on 07 February 2007 by admin

There was a time we’d fawn over 12GB of hard disk storage in package this small. But 16GB flash drives already pop for about $150 on-line. Still, it’s always good to see Seagate’s 1-inch drive rolled out as product. The Pocketec Nano goes 38×48×15-mm / 48-grams and brings a USB 2.0 connector which discretely folds into the unit. Yours for 195,000KRW or $210. Puh-lease… it’s not even waterproof.
[Via AVING]
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from engadget