Hard drive

Western Digital plans 40TB drives, but it’s still not enough

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18 October 2017

Hard disk makers are using capacity as their chief bulwark against the rise of solid-state drives (SSDs), since they certainly cannot argue on performance, and Western Digital has shown off a new technology that could lead to 40TB drives.

Western Digital already has the largest-capacity drive on the market. It recently introduced a 14TB drive, filled with helium to reduce drag on the spinning platters. But thanks to a new technology called microwave-assisted magnetic recording (MAMR), the company hopes to reach 40TB by 2025. The company promised engineering samples of drive by mid-2018.

MAMR technology is a new method of cramming more data onto the disk. Western Digital’s chief rival, Seagate, is working on a competitive product called HAMR, or heat-assisted magnetic recording. And while the technicalities of it may sound exotic, what matters is that it should ship sometime in 2019, and that is after 13 years of research and development. MAMR was first developed by a Carnegie Mellon professor in 2006 and work has gone on ever since.

The physics of hard drives
Just like semiconductors, hard drives are running into a brick wall called the laws of physics. Every year it gets harder and harder to shrink these devices while cramming more in them at the same time.

Western Digital believes MAMR should enable 15% decline in terabytes per dollar, another argument hard disk has on SSD. A hard disk will always be cheaper per terabyte than SSD because cramming more data into the same space is easier, relatively speaking, for hard drives than flash memory chips. MAMR and HAMR are expected to enable drive makers to pack as much as 4 terabits per square inch on a platter, well beyond the 1.1 terabits per square inch in today’s drives.

Data growing faster than disk capacity
The thing is, data is growing faster than hard disk capacity. According to research from IDC (sponsored by Seagate, it should be noted), by 2025 the global datasphere will grow to 163 zettabytes (a zettabyte is a trillion gigabytes). That is 10 times the 16.1ZB of data generated in 2016. Much of it will come from Big Data and analytics, especially the Internet of Things (IoT), where sensor data will be picking up gigabytes of data per second.

And those data sets are so massive, many companies don’t use them all. They dump their accumulated data into what are called data lakes to be processed later, if ever. Estimates are that collected data is unused as high as 90%. But it has to sit somewhere, and that is on a hard disk.

Mind you, that is just Big Data. Individuals are generating massive quantities of data as well. Online backup and storage vendor BackBlaze, which has seen its profile rise after it began reporting on hard drive failures, uses hundreds of thousands of drives in its data centres. It just placed an order for 100 petabytes worth of disk storage, and it plans to deploy all of it in the fourth quarter of this year. And it has plans for another massive order for Q1. And that’s just one online storage vendor among dozens.

All of that is great news for Western Digital, Seagate and Toshiba — and the sales reps who work on commission.

 

IDG News Service

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