http://www.seagate.com/www/en-us/products/desktops/barracuda_hard_drives/barracuda_lp
It is very strange. How did they choose 5900 RPM?
It is very strange. How did they choose 5900 RPM?
2TB drives are the higher end of consumer hard drive lines and priced accordingly, regardless of RPM.
http://www.seagate.com/www/en-us/products/desktops/barracuda_hard_drives/barracuda_lp
It is very strange. How did they choose 5900 RPM?
Yes, I have yet to have a single one of my six 45GB 75GXP Drives fail even though they have been in continious service since before they were considered flawed: Like the energizer bunny, they keep running and running.You trust the people who brought you the Deathstar?
Which is why they are likely to get replaced eventually. For many applications, there is no real need for much faster or even much larger so their life continues on. There is no need to allocate additional resources to things that continue to do what needs to be done. If it just plain works, then any change can only mess that up. i.e there is no upside.I can't believe you still have a use for 45GB drives. The smallest non-SSD drive I have is 400GB.
Exactly why I avoid Hitachi too. There are too many cases with HD bays that have no fans and I really don't like crowding hitachi drives where there isn't a fan: they run too hot already.Mostly I shy away from Hitachi because they are characteristically warm in a way I do not like, but for me they have a much better track record of reliability than WD or Seagate.
Yet there is no 2TB Hibachi to compare. Are they on the way out of the drive business?
Yet there is no 2TB Hibachi to compare. Are they on the way out of the drive business?
In other news, Hitachi drives are now suspect.
WD did buy in to an SSD firm, though. I can't decide if a WD drive with no moving parts might actually be reliable or not. For now I'm going with "not."
If they start making reliable drives, that'll be the first thing to go.They may not be reliable, but they have a very streamlined RMA process.