Archive for the 'Other Hardware' Category

Coming Soon: 1TB Solid State Drives

Tuesday, February 17th, 2009

Hard DriveA company named pureSilicon revealed a new line of fast, high-capacity SSDs at last month’s Consumer Electronics Show. The drives, which have storage capacities up to 1TB and a maximum transfer rate of about 300MB/s, are scheduled for release in early 2009. No word on the cost, but it’ll probably be on the high side.

Thanks to Josh for this topic.

Link: http://www.marketwire.com/…

Securely Wiping a Solid State Drive

Friday, February 13th, 2009

Hard DriveTurns out that wiping data from an SSD is much easier than from a traditional magnetic hard drive.

Link: http://www.computerworld.com/…
(via digg)

Seagate Hard Drive Problems

Wednesday, January 21st, 2009

Hard DriveSeveral Seagate hard drive models, but especially the Barracuda 7200.11, have been freezing up and failing. The problem is with the firmware, and Seagate says that the data is still intact on the drives (but just not accessible). See the linked article for instructions on how to update the firmware.

Link: http://seagate.custkb.com/…

Update: The first fix released by Seagate had a bug in it. They’ve released a second fix.

More Core Wars

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

CPUThe speed at which a program is executed on a multi-core system can vary by up to 10 percent, depending on a variety of things from how interrupts are handled to the way the program is coded. Chad’s news has previously discussed the “memory wall” problem that occurs in multi-core computers.

Link: http://gcn.com/…
(via Slashdot)

The Core Wars

Monday, December 29th, 2008

CPUIt seems like the new thing in computer hardware is to get the most cores. If two is better than one, then why not four, or eight? But the truth of the matter is that processing power doesn’t necessarily increase at the same rate as the number of cores. One of the major problems is the “memory wall”, where the cores still share common memory and you’ll run into a situation where one core is waiting for another to finish using the memory bus. The linked article mentions the case where, for certain types of problems, a 16-core CPU has about the same processing power as a dual-core CPU. Yes, you read that right. The recommended solution is stacking memory on top of the CPU—I’m not sure what exactly that means, but I imagine we’ll be hearing more about it in the coming years.

Link: http://arstechnica.com/…

The Next Step in GPU Supercomputing

Sunday, December 7th, 2008

GPUChad’s News has previously discussed the concept of using graphics card GPUs to do regular computing tasks. Now NVIDIA has released a card that’s full of GPUs yet doesn’t have a video output—it’s meant to be used solely for heavy computational tasks.

Link: http://tech.slashdot.org/…

The Future of Laptop Computers

Sunday, October 19th, 2008

Laptop

This paradigm could radically change the way we use computers. And it’s coming soon.

Link: http://blogs.computerworld.com/…
(via digg)

Solid State Drives Invade the Enterprise

Saturday, August 30th, 2008

Hard DriveSolid state hard drives (SSDs) aren’t just for laptops anymore—they’re making inroads into the server market. IT managers like them because they run faster and don’t use as much power, which compensates for the high price. And as far as capacity goes, IBM is testing a 4 TB SSD array. Before you switch out your hard drives, however, be aware that not all is perfect in SSD-land. Regular hard drives are still more cost-effective for systems that perform lots of non-sequential read operations or lots of write operations.

Vista and Solid State Hard Drives Don’t Play Friendly

Friday, August 15th, 2008

Hard DriveFrom the article: “Vista is not optimized for flash memory solid-state disk[s].” So instead of asking Microsoft to change Windows, the SSD manufacturers are modifying their drive controllers to “compensate for Vista shortfalls.”

Link: http://news.cnet.com/…
(via Slashdot)

Update: Ars Technica has an update on this topic. Samsung is taking action to help resolve the problem.

Where’s Darth Vader, I Hear His Theme Music

Saturday, June 14th, 2008

Darth VaderThe things you can do with a floppy drive stepper motor and mad programming skills.

Link: http://www.youtube.com/…
(via Neatorama)

Building a Supercomputer with Graphics Cards

Monday, June 2nd, 2008

ScientistBack in November, Chad’s News discussed the possibility of using GPUs to perform computations. Well, now it’s been done officially. According to the linked article, a PC with four graphics cards (8 GPUs total) has the computational power of 300 dual-core CPUs. This comes with a caveat, of course, as GPUs only excel at certain types of problems. But still, I think it’s a pretty impressive accomplishment.

Link: http://www.dvhardware.net/…
(via Slashdot)

Roll Your Own SSD

Tuesday, April 15th, 2008

Hard DriveTired of solid state drives that cost way too much, but you still want the advantages of having one? The linked article tells how to make an SSD of your own for much less.

Link: http://www.engadget.com/…