2007 saw the demand for storage soar in every conceivable sector.
Hitachi
shipped 1TB hard
drives in the first quarter, followed by announcements later in the year
that it expected to be making
4TB drives by
2011 using a new technology to help avoid problems such as
magnetic
avalanche.
Rival
Fujitsu
revealed a few months later that it would be cramming 1TB of data into a
standard laptop hard
drive, while
Buffalo
Technology came to market with what it claimed was the first external
portable hard drive with a
capacity of
320GB.
Storage also began to feature commonly in other devices such as mobile
phones, as several new handsets
packed 8GB of storage,
and even TVs started shipping with
hard drives built
in.
The huge increase in portable media consumption saw customers flocking to the
tills to purchase ever cheaper and larger memory cards, creating a market
worth
around $7bn.
2007 also saw the birth of commercially available
solid state
hard drives (SSDs)
based on Flash
memory rather than spinning disks.
Although still quite pricey and limited to around 32GB, the market is growing
rapidly with vendors such as
Alienware
offering SSD as an
option in new
PCs and the likes of Hitachi promising 128GB SSDs around May 2008.
Manufacturers are still staking their territory in the SSD market, which is
expected to do particularly well for faster and more reliable data storage in
notebooks.
In fact practically unlimited levels of data storage have become so common
that companies are having to find ways other than sheer volume to differentiate
themselves either through
green initiatives,
storage density or
other unique
features.
Despite a
security hiccup
of its own,
Seagate
has warned that this proliferation of storage options has serious ramifications
for company security.
"Today sensitive data and intellectual property can travel as email
attachments, downloads from a business portal, or on a device in the user's
pocket," said Ian O'Leary, corporate communications director for Seagate in
EMEA.
"Data is everywhere and more vulnerable than ever. Loss or compromise of that
data can be expensive and can negatively impact productivity and corporate
image."
As demonstrated by some of the high profile data losses in 2007, security has
to be top of the agenda in 2008. Security, surveillance and Full Disk Encryption
will be some of the biggest discussion topics in the coming year.
The rise in data storage regulations, coupled with the increasing use of
virtualisation, has seen enterprise storage climb dramatically as well.
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