|
INCREASED STORAGE.(new module by Simple Technology)(Evaluation)
From:
Poptronics
| Date:
March 1, 2001
| COPYRIGHT 2001 Poptronix, Inc. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan. All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group.Copyright information
|
Solid-State Flash Disk Modules from Simple Technology were recently introduced into the embedded mass data storage market. The miniature footprint of the Flash Disk Modules allows these products to be used as components in embedded systems, replacing or augmenting conventional IDE hard disk drives. The modules are available...
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
|
Small, rugged disk drives take (fairly) hard knocks. (EDN-Technology Update)
EDN
; The latest small disk drives are more shock resistant than ever, but they're still vulnerable to really rough treatment. The most remarkable thing about today's 2.5-inch and smaller disk drives isn't that they're so small (one weighs only an ounce) or so capacious (another holds half a gigabyte of
|
|
Technology: One Man's Trash Is...: Dumpster-diving for disk drives raises eyebrows.
US Banker
; Between Washington Mutual getting blackmailed after selling computers with sensitive information and now another firm's ATM disk drives showing up on eBay, banks might need to think harder about how they trash their computers. Properly disposing of disk drives, servers and other obsolete equipment
|
|
Disk drives: 40 years of prosperity and no signs of slowing down.(EDN 40 Years: Survival of the Technical Fittest)
EDN
; When refrigerator-sized disk drives were introduced 40 years ago, few people imagined that they would still be around today. And those people were rightsort of. The monstrous disk drives have disappeared, but they have been replaced with their smaller, faster counterparts. I first heard the term
|
|
Say goodbye to all that data; Two Twin Cities companies will make sure that old disk drives are destroyed beyond any hope of data recovery - or theft.(BUSINESS)
Star Tribune (Minneapolis, MN)
; Byline: STEVE ALEXANDER; STAFF WRITER As a hardhearted detective might say, dead disk drives tell no tales. Or at least they don't after two Twin Cities companies are done with them. Worried about data and identity theft, businesses are paying good money to have old computer disk drives beaten to a
|
|
MAGNETIC PERIPHERALS' FUTURE BRIGHTENS WITH NEW DISK DRIVES
The Journal Record
; For more than a year, we've been hearing and reading about efforts to bring high technology to Oklahoma City. Well, it's here now in the production of computer disk drives that are competing with Japanese products in "worldwide industrial combat," says Lawrence Pearlman, president of Peripheral
|