Security

New Fujitsu optical head promises terabit per square inch recording.

Fujitsui has developed a new optical drive element that could one day achieve one terabit per square inch recording. The element is for thermally assisted magnetic drives and helps focus heat onto a hard drive platter so that a magnetic head can record more data. The new head element, along with perpendicular recording technology, will help hard drive companies increase capacities. The new element can focus on a "sub-hundred nanometer" spot and can achieve a spot size of 88nm by 60nm. The focused spot is heated by the element which allows a magnetic recording head to pack more data onto the platter. Heat-assisted magnetic recording or HAMR has been researched for several years now. The theory is that hard drive bits cannot keep shrinking forever because the magnetic bits will start interfering with each other. By heating a spot, a bit can be recorded more easily and the subsequent cooling will stabilize the data. Fujitsu has recently made other advancements to increase drive capacities. Last year the company announced new lubricants and a lower head flying height. It also has changed the materials used in the drive head.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):

News of the day
Tracesmart Awarded HSBC Contract to Deliver Fraud Prevention Service
HSBC Division Employ Tracesmart"s Proprietary Existence System
Popular Articles

Organic battery to enable backups during power failures.
Yokyo

dbx repair - repair Outlook Express dbx files.
Intel intros HPC developer tools.
Intel is shipping five new software development tools that promise developers of supercomputing and distributed high performance computing (HPC) software environments to accelerate and simplify the creations of applications. As a result the new "Cluster Tools" help to reduce the costs of software development. The new products include Trace Analyzer and Collector 6.0, Message Passing Interface (MPI) Library 2.0, Math Kernel Library (MKL) Cluster Edition 8.0, Integrated Performance Primitives (IPP) 5.0 and VTune Performance Analyzer for Linux 8.0. Intel said that all components can be used in conjunction with other popular software development tools.