Western Digital WD Elements 2 TB USB 2.0 Desktop External Hard Drive

Western Digital WD Elements 2 TB USB 2.0 Desktop External Hard Drive





Saturday, September 17, 2011

Will Green Hard Drives Go the Distance?

As Joel Hruska from Ars Technica says, green is the new black in the It industry. All things is going green, from data centres to hard drives, and It fellowships are doing their utmost to be seen as part of the environment explication and not part of the problem. Hard drive manufacturer, Western Digital, got into the game a while ago with its line of productive GreenPower hard drives. They have recently extended their range with the embark on of the new firm storehouse division: Re2-Gp. The Re2-Gp drives come in three sizes: 500Gb, 750Gb and 1Tb.


With all the hype and operation surrounding the rush to go green, Hruska questioned either all developments were productive and delivered on their promises, or either fellowships were plainly climbing on the bandwagon and sticking a "green" label on their products. Happily, in Western Digital's case, it appears as though they are the real deal.

Western Hard Drive

Western Digital's new drives make use of three dissimilar systems, which work in conjunction to make the Re2-Gp up to 40% more productive than their competitors, without sacrificing execution or reliability. They also claim that while in use, the Re2-Gp uses 4 to 5W less Power than competitors' hard drives.

Will Green Hard Drives Go the Distance?

The three systems which make up the Re2-Gp are: IntelliPower, which manages the transfer rate, spin speed and caching algorithms; IntelliPark, which controls the drive heads, and reduces drag by piquant them off the disk while the entire ideas is idle; and IntelliSeek, which calculates exactly how fast the drive heads need to Move for the ideas to function continuously. The drive heads then Move at the optimum speed and no faster, which reduces power consumption.

Western Digital estimates that the biggest power savings will be seen in data centres, where fellowships can expect to save (R70-80) per Re2-Gp drive installed. In sum, large fellowships that make use of manifold hard drives can save tens of thousands of dollars per year (or hundreds of thousands of Rands).

Western Digital's GreenPower drives and Re2-Gp systems were reviewed by The Tech Report, which reported that they are as power productive as they claim to be. This is good news for green computing endeavours on the whole, as assorted companies' efforts are vindicated and technology is proved to work just as well as original computing methods. It also encourages other fellowships to give green a try, which is needful in driving competition and the evolution of technology. Only time will tell if these efforts stand up to the demands of consumers in the long-term, but the foremost thing is that, for the moment, steps are being taken to address a pressing environmental problem.

Recommended site:

http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20071125-western-digital-bills-its-new-re2-gp-drive-as-the-greenest-ever.html

Will Green Hard Drives Go the Distance?

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