Price Guides August 2004: Optical and Magnetic Storage
by Adam Rader on August 7, 2004 10:23 AM EST- Posted in
- Guides
Hard Drives: Parallel ATA
With some of the sales and deals that have been thrown around the Hot Deals forum lately, it's easy to become spoiled by prices at, near, or even below $0.40/GB, but luckily, there are still very reasonably priced hard drives out there that don't involve coupons, codes or lengthy mail-in rebates that most would probably forget to send in anyway.Maxtor leads the way this week with two drives, which are not only priced well, but also very quiet, yet high on the performance ladder. The Maxtor 160GB 7200RPM 8MB drive this week gives a great price-to-capacity ratio while incorporating Maxtor's fluid dynamic bearing (FDB) mechanism to reduce overall noise from the drive while in operation. Anyone who has ever installed a few noisy drives and placed the computer in their bedroom knows how much noise can sometimes matter. Hard drives tend to be one of the biggest noisemakers inside modern day PC's and Maxtor is continuing to do what they can to combat that fact.
For only a few cents more per gig, Maxtor's 250GB 7200RPM drive makes a great drive; its capacity is an important factor. Paired up in RAID 1, these drives can also make for a very nice backup solution to avoid losing those tax documents, that massive MP3 and video collection, and all of those photos that you took with your digital camera on vacation. Of course, HD-based backup is often a preferred method, since it remains very easy to access the data and because hard drives are substantially a matured technology compared to DVDs and CDs, which some tests have shown can deteriorate over time periods as short as a year or two.
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PrinceGaz - Thursday, August 12, 2004 - link
DVD manufacturers use the same decimal GB that hard-drive manufacturers doDVD = 4.7 decimal GB = approx 4,700,000,000 bytes = approx 4.38 binary GB
DVD DL = 8.5 decimal GB = approx 8,540,000,000 bytes = approx 7.95 binary GB
They really are 4.7GB single-layer and 8.5GB dual-layer (not 9.4GB) capacity.
KristopherKubicki - Saturday, August 7, 2004 - link
PriceGaz, actually they are double capacity. A normal DVDR is advertised as 4.7GB (Hence DVDR-5) but it really can only hold 4.38GB or something like that.Kristopher
PrinceGaz - Saturday, August 7, 2004 - link
On page 2, DVD burners "Keep in mind, however, that this drive does not play nicely with DVD-DL, so don't expect to cram 9.4 gigs onto a DVD without some major compression on your behalf."Dual layer actually only stores 8.5GB, not 9.4GB (its not double the capacity of single layer).