Tiny Hard Drives Coming to Cell Phones | eWeek

Tiny Hard Drives Coming to Cell Phones

Écrit par
John Quain
John Quain
Jul 7, 2004
1 minute read
eWeek Le contenu et les recommandations de produits sont indépendants de la rédaction. Nous pouvons gagner de l'argent lorsque vous cliquez sur des liens vers nos partenaires. En savoir plus

As manufacturers cram many more features into cell phones, theres one glaring problem: storage capacity. So hard drive makers are looking to spin up tiny drives for wireless handsets.

“Beyond one gigabyte, a hard drive can deliver more storage at lower cost than flash memory,” says John Harris, strategic marketing manager for storage-chip maker Agere Systems. A 1-inch, 2GB drive now costs about $50, he says.

Seagate recently announced a 1-inch offering, and Toshiba has an even smaller 0.8-inch drive-about the size of an SD card. Harris expects prices to continue dropping, and he predicts tiny hard drives will be the next big step for cell phones.

Putting hard drives in phones doesnt present a power consumption problem, say drive makers. Most quarter-size drives spin up quickly, dump information to a buffer, and then shut down to save power.

Cornice is working on putting hard drives into cell phones, and analysts expect to see 2GB handsets next year.


Click here

for the full story from PCMagazine.

eWeek Logo

eWeek has the latest technology news and analysis, buying guides, and product reviews for IT professionals and technology buyers. The site's focus is on innovative solutions and covering in-depth technical content. eWeek stays on the cutting edge of technology news and IT trends through interviews and expert analysis. Gain insight from top innovators and thought leaders in the fields of IT, business, enterprise software, startups, and more.

Propriété de TechnologyAdvice. © 2026 TechnologyAdvice. Tous droits réservés

Divulgation publicitaire : Certains des produits qui apparaissent sur ce site proviennent d'entreprises dont TechnologyAdvice reçoit une compensation. Cette compensation peut influencer la façon dont les produits apparaissent sur ce site, notamment l'ordre dans lequel ils apparaissent. TechnologyAdvice n'inclut pas toutes les entreprises ou tous les types de produits disponibles sur le marché.