WD ships industry's first 2.5-inch 1TB hard drive

WD SHIPS INDUSTRY'S FIRST 1 TB MOBILE HARD DRIVE
New Drives Offer the Highest Capacities to Date For Mobile Storage Applications and Notebooks
LAKE FOREST, Calif. – July 27, 2009 - WD (NYSE: WDC) today announced two new mobile hard drives that reach new capacity extremes. The highlight is a one terabyte model – the industry's highest-capacity 2.5-inch drive available. Industry-leading 333 GB-per-platter technology enables the new WD Scorpio® Blue™ SATA 2.5-inch hard drives to offer mobile storage device and notebook users an enormous 1 TB capacity. A 750 GB WD Scorpio Blue model also will be available.
The WD Scorpio Blue 750 GB and 1 TB hard drives have a 12.5 mm form factor and are ideally suited for use in portable storage solutions, such as the newly released My Passport™ Essential™ SE Portable USB Drives. Other applications include select notebooks and small form factor desktop PCs, where quiet and cool operation are important. Both WD Scorpio Blue drives deliver high-performance with a 3 gigabits per second (Gb/s) transfer rate.
"The convergence of the growing mobile computing and digital media trends produces demand for desktop-like capacities in portable devices," said Jim Morris, senior vice president and general manager of client systems at WD. "Our new WD Scorpio Blue drives enable people to take even more of their digital collections with them wherever they go and, realizing the value of their data, back up their notebooks on their My Passport drives."
WD Scorpio Blue hard drives offer high-performance, low power consumption and cool operation in portable applications. They are designed with WD features to be reliable and shock resistant while also delivering industry-leading capacity and performance.
WD Scorpio Blue Features
WhisperDrive™ - WD's exclusive WhisperDrive technology combines state-of-the-art seeking algorithms to produce one of the quietest 2.5-inch drives available.
ShockGuard™ - Leading-edge ShockGuard technology combines firmware and hardware advancements to meet the highest combined shock tolerance specifications required for mobile and notebook applications.
SecurePark™ - Parks the recording heads off the disk surface during spin up, spin down and when the drive is off. This ensures the recording head never touches the disk surface, resulting in improved long-term reliability due to less head wear and improved shock tolerance.
Price and Availability
WD Scorpio Blue 750 GB drives (model WD7500KEVT) are available now through select distributors and resellers; the 1 TB capacity (model WD10TEVT) is available now configured into My Passport Essential SE USB drives. The manufacturer's suggested retail price (MSRP) for the WD Scorpio Blue 1 TB drive is $249.99 USD and for the 750 GB version it is $189.99 USD. WD Scorpio Blue hard drives are covered by a three-year limited warranty. More information about WD Scorpio Blue mobile hard drives may be found on the company's Web site at http://www.wdc.com/en/products/Products.asp?DriveID=685.
About WD
WD, one of the storage industry's pioneers and long-time leaders, provides products and services for people and organizations that collect, manage and use digital information. The company designs and produces reliable, high-performance hard drives and solid state drives that keep users' data accessible and secure from loss. Its advanced technologies are configured into applications for client and enterprise computing, embedded systems and consumer electronics, as well as its own consumer storage and media products.
WD was founded in 1970. The company's storage products are marketed to leading OEMs, systems manufacturers, selected resellers and retailers under the Western Digital® and WD® brand names. Visit the Investor section of the company's Web site (www.westerndigital.com) to access a variety of financial and investor information.
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Western Digital, WD, the WD logo and WD Scorpio are registered trademarks in the U.S. and other countries; Blue, My Passport, Essential, SecurePark, ShockGuard and WhisperDrive are trademarks of Western Digital Technologies, Inc. in the U.S. and other countries. All other trademarks herein are property of their respective owner. As used for storage capacity, one megabyte (MB) = one million bytes, one gigabyte (GB) = one billion bytes, and one terabyte (TB) = one trillion bytes. Total accessible capacity varies depending on operating environment. As used for transfer rate or interface, megabyte per second (MB/s) = one million bytes per second, and gigabit per second (Gb/s) = one billion bits per second.




















Unbelievable.
To think that three years ago I thought the 100GB drives in my laptop were spacious.
Does anyone know if these drives will work in a 2.5" SAS enclosure? SAS drives are 15mm if I remember correctly. Thinking about this enclosure:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16816101189
Since they're not SAS drives, but SATA, I wouldn't think so.
My PS3 Thirsts for more!!!
Well my 500GB 7200rpm spinner gets a reprieve from obsolescence till this thing gets down to 9.5mm
12.5mm thickness has always been a standard. If you are too young to realize that you might want to keep it to yourself. Today, thinness has caused many notebooks to sacrifice the ability to take 12.5mm drives but virtually all notebooks too them once upon a time. The older generation MBP 17 would take 12.5mm; the new ones I don't know.
That standard was dropped A LONG time ago. Its like compairing a standard RS-232 and USB and saying that RS-232 is still relivant. Yes it is a standard, but pretty much a dead one.
The last system that I saw that did a 12.5 was a old Thinkpad. Tosh, Gateway, Sony, Dell, and yes even Apple has been using the 9.5 standard for the better part of a decade which makes it the defacto standard for the industry.
Actually I'd love to know what laptops can still handle a 12.5 form factor. The only ones that remotely come to mind are Dell's larger XPS systems where you can take off the base panel and screw in a hard drive from the bottom, but even then I'm not 100% certain.
Adding extra platters in order to set benchmarks is an old trick, and, unless you reeeeeeally need the space, weighting for a higher capacity platter instead is a better bet.
well truth be told, the 1TB has 333GB / platter, so if they came out with a 9.5mm version it would have 666GB, which would be a record.
Would be totally cool, too.
Can't resist this, I've been running out of storage space on my 500GB drive. Just looked in the HD slot of my x200 tablet, looks like there's just enough give there for another 3mm. Going to take a gamble on it. Photos take up absurd amounts of space after you've been shooting for a couple of years.
I just want to confirm that the MacBook Pro 13", 15" and 17" can hold WD 1TB HD with a height of 12.5mm? I want the 17" MBP but I also wanted a 13" MBP also. If the 17" MBP ONLY that would be fine for me though. I rather 1TB that's more then enough room for Final Cut Pro and Logic Pro plus 720p Movies from iTunes!
Close, but still no cigar in have it fit in my old IPod Video.. Not that it would connect anyway, but it is a dream though :)
Ummm... those use 1.8" drives. I think those currently top out at 240GB.
I like my HDDs skinny.
I think this is what Apple has been waiting for in order to further slim down the iMac line.
Waiting for the 9.5mm version...
"which dwarfs the standard 9.5mm-height slot found in most laptops, but hey, progress is progress -- right?"
Nope. Not if the damn thing doesn't fit any anything other then specialized cages or special laptops. Fail. This is nothing more then marketing to be able to say we made it to the top of the mountain.....never mind its not the summit, just a single peak along the way to the top. Also maybe its just me but I've been seeing a lot higher failure rates over the last few years. (Dell/Sony and now Gateway warranty tech) I don't know if this is just chance, but I'm wondering if all the manufactures are cutting quality corners for capacity?
Amazing. I thought the 320GB drive I got awhile back was amazing, too.
LOL... yeah the 320 I have was purchased day one when they were available. I feel you're pain. All I have to say is ALLELUIA, PRAISE GOD. I've been running on less then 2GB free space for the last few weeks and my pro-apps are not happy with me!
THANK GOD, I desperately needed this space!
Well, I just bought one. I'm perfectly fine with them coming out initially in an external only size. Still useful. They sell a lot of those external drives I bet? What do you do when your laptop hard drive crashes otherwise?
Hey WD! Feel free to make an external drive with as many platters as you want to hit 2TB first!
All you whiners, I assume a 640GB/666GB 9.5mm version will be coming out in due course.
What I was trying to say was FUCK YES>>>> if it fits in a 17" MBP I am GOLDEN I CAN'T WAIT. Does anyone know where I can purchase one of these bad lads?
MAGIC - TWELVE
12 INCH SCREEN
12 CELL BATTERY
12.5 mm FORM FACTOR HARD DRIVE
12 OS OPTIONS
1280p
12 STORAGE OPTIONS (INCLUDING DUAL-HARD DRIVE, HYBRID, AND NO INCLUDED DRIVE AT ALL)
12 ARMS
12 FEET CABLE EXTENSION FOR DETACHABLE SCREEN