Western Digital Crams Two-Disk RAID Into Portable Thunderbolt Drive

Western Digital Crams Two-Disk RAID Into Portable Thunderbolt Drive

The new MyPassport Pro from Western Digital is the world’s first bus-powered portable hard drive to offer two disks with RAID capability for blazing fast, grab-and-go storage.

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DiskCryptor: Entire Hard Drive Encryption

This article was written on September 03, 2009 by CyberNet.

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I think that in the future we will be encrypting a lot of our data because, well, most of it probably won’t be located on our own machines. When all our files are in the cloud encryption will be important to ensure the security of our data, but up to now most people have never worried about encrypting anything.

Free solutions for encrypting files and hard drives are available, such as TrueCrypt, but it’s not always the most user-friendly thing to set up. The free (and open source) DiskCryptor is pretty straightforward though. This solution will encrypt hard drives, flash drives, and even CD/DVD’s. Unfortunately DiskCryptor is restricted to encrypting entire drives, but for some people that won’t be a problem if the sensitive data is kept on a secondary drive. Or, of course, DiskCryptor supports the encrypting of your boot drive if you want to go that route. Personally I encrypt all my drives except my primary (bootable) one.

What about performance? Here’s the claim they make on their site:

On the Intel Core 2 Quad Q6600 CPU, data encryption speed amounts to 104Mb/s per core. The maximum speed of reading the data from a single hard disk, equals to 80Mb/s, thus consequently, one can work with up to 5 different disks without the loss of performance, when using the aforementioned type of processor. In case if your disks are not operating under a constant high load, then it is possible to work with even higher number of disks, and on a weaker system, without losing the performance.

That’s pretty impressive, but those particular stats are for a quad core processor. On a dual core that should still mean you can read from two drives simultaneously even if they are at maximum load. So you shouldn’t see too much of a performance hit just because you’re encrypting your data.

Here’s a list of some other features they highlight:

  • Disk partition encryption of any configuration, including boot and system partitions.
  • Choice to select an encryption algorithm: AES, Twofish or Serpent. Cascaded modes are available as well.
  • Full support for dynamic disks.
  • Full support for encryption of external USB storage devices.
  • Ability to create encrypted CD’s and DVD’s.
  • High encryption performance, comparable to efficiency of a non-encrypted system.
  • Support for hardware cryptography found in VIA processors.
  • Support for disk devices with large sector sizes, which is important when working with hardware RAID.
  • Automatic mount of disk partitions and external storage devices.
  • Extended configuration possibilities of booting an encrypted OS. Support for different multi-boot scenarios.
  • Full support for 3rd party boot loaders (LILO, GRUB, etc.).
  • Ability to place boot loader on external medium and to authenticate using the key medium.
  • Support for key files.
  • Support for hotkeys to dismount partitions, initiate emergency system stop, etc.

DiskCryptor works on Windows 2000 up to Windows 7, and is compatible with both 32-bit and 64-bit systems.

DiskCryptor Homepage (Windows only; 32/64-bit; freeware)
[via FreewareGenius]

Copyright © 2014 CyberNetNews.com

LaCie Sphere Hard Drive

LaCie-Sphere-Hard-Drive

Check out this newly released hard drive from LaCie, the Sphere. Designed by Christofle, this elegant handcrafted hard drive is enclosed in a spherical case of silver-plated steel, has a USB 3.0 connection interface and comes in 1TB of storage capacity. The 1TB Sphere is available now for a retail price of $499. [Product Page]

Your Most Bourgeois Bits Belong Inside This $490 Silver-Plated Data Ball

Your Most Bourgeois Bits Belong Inside This $490 Silver-Plated Data Ball

Priced at $490, this is easily the most impractical 1TB hard drive in the galaxy.

    



LaCie Debuts Fuel, a Take-Anywhere Wireless Drive for Mobiles

LaCie Debuts Fuel, a Take-Anywhere Wireless Drive for Mobiles

Fuel a battery-powered 1TB drive that connects to your mobile or your laptop wirelessly over Wi-Fi, allowing you to watch movies or backup data from anywhere, without cables.

    



LaCie has doubled the storage capacity of its extra-resilient Rugged USB 3.0 Thunderbolt Series exte

LaCie has doubled the storage capacity of its extra-resilient Rugged USB 3.0 Thunderbolt Series external hard drives. They now offer two terabytes of storage that you can drop or carelessly toss about for $300.

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HGST 6TB Ultrastar He6 Helium-Filled Hard Drive Shipped

HGST-6TB-Ultrastar-He6

HGST has begun shipping their newest helium-filled hard drive, the Ultrastar He6. Claimed as the industry’s first helium filled hard drive that simultaneously increases capacity while lowering power consumption and operating temperature, this 6TB 3.5-inch hard drive is equipped with a SATA 6.0 Gbps interface, a 64MB of buffer memory, a MTBF of 2 million hours and a 7200 RPM spindle speed. [HGST]

HGST Launches Helium-Filled 6TB Hard Drive

HGST Helium filled hard drive He6HGST, a subsidiary of Western Digital, announced on Monday the launch of its first helium-filled hard drive. The new Ultrastar He6 drive comes with a 6TB capacity in a 3.5-inch drive enclosure.

According to HGST, having helium in the enclosure has significantly less friction than air, allowing for less energy needed to physically move platters around inside the drive resulting in more platters with an acceptable performance. More platters mean more drive space with a general increase by three quarters over a standard air-filled hard drive.

The challenge has been to create a chamber in the drive that was tight enough to avoid leaking the helium, and HGST assures us that it is a safe volume with “less helium than a balloon”. Pricing was not initially available, however the company stated that it will “…cost-effectively extend the capacity and cost-per-gigabyte curve for many product generations to come.”

HGST

Western Digital’s New Hard Drives Are Filled With Helium

Western Digital's New Hard Drives Are Filled With Helium

Digital storage is always getting cheaper and more capacious—but Western Digital has a plan to fill it with helium to make hard drives way more efficient than ever before.

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Adding a Little Heat Could Give Us a 40 TB Hard Drive in a Few Years

When it comes to cramming as much data as possible on a platter, hard drive manufacturers will use every trick in the book to maximize capacity. Including turning up the heat as TDK plans to do with a new technique that could deliver 40 terabyte hard drives by 2020.

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