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  2. List of disk drive form factors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_disk_drive_form...

    As of 2023, 2.5-inch and 3.5-inch hard disks are the most popular sizes. By 2009, all manufacturers had discontinued the development of new products for the 1.3-inch, 1-inch and 0.85-inch form factors due to falling prices of flash memory , which has no moving parts.

  3. Timeline of binary prefixes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_binary_prefixes

    The single unit price of the 7/32 is $9,950.00. ... A 20 megabyte hard disk holds 20 million bytes of ... = 1 000 000 000 bytes, 1 T B (tera bytes) = 1 000 000 000 ...

  4. Solid-state drive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solid-state_drive

    Hard disk drive (HDD) Price per capacity SSDs are generally more expensive than HDDs and are expected to remain so. As of early 2018, SSD prices were around $0.30 per gigabyte for 4 TB models. [23] HDDs, as of early 2018, were priced around $0.02 to $0.03 per gigabyte for 1 TB models. [23] Storage capacity

  5. Hard disk drive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hard_disk_drive

    For example, a typical 1 TB hard disk with 512-byte sectors provides additional capacity of about 93 GB for the ECC data. [65] In the newest drives, as of 2009, [66] low-density parity-check codes (LDPC) were supplanting Reed–Solomon; LDPC codes enable performance close to the Shannon limit and thus provide the highest storage density available.

  6. Western Digital - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_Digital

    In 1994, Western Digital began producing hard drives at its Malaysian factory, employing 13,000 people. [16] Products and ideas of this time did not go far. The Portfolio drive (a 3-inch (76 mm) form factor model, developed with JT Storage) was a flop, as was the SDX hard disk to CD-ROM interface.

  7. History of hard disk drives - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_hard_disk_drives

    1991 – Intégral Peripherals 1820 "Mustang" – 21.4 megabytes, one 1.8-inch disk, first 1.8-inch HDD [42] 1992 – HP Kittyhawk – 20 MB, first 1.3-inch hard-disk drive; 1992 – Seagate ships the first 7,200-rpm hard drive, the Barracuda [42] 1993 – IBM 3390 model 9, the last Single Large Expensive Disk drive announced by IBM