Hard Drive Evolution Essay, Research Paper
Even before the first commercial computers appeared in 1951, “mass” storage, although minuscule by today’s standards, was a necessity. As early as the mid-1800s, punch cards were used to provide input to early calculators and other machines. The 1940s ushered in the decade when vacuum tubes were used for storage until, finally, tape drives started to replace punch cards in the early 1950s. Only a couple of years later, magnetic drums appeared on the scene. In 1957, the first hard drive was introduced as a component of IBM’s RAMAC 350. It required 50 24-inch disks to store five megabytes of data and cost roughly $35,000.
For years, hard disk drives were confined to mainframe and minicomputer installations. Vast “disk farms” of giant 14 and 8 inch drives costing tens of thousands of dollars each buzzed away in the air conditioned isolation of corporate data centers. The personal computer revolution in the early 1980s changed all that, ushering in the introduction of the first small hard disk drives. The first 5.25-inch hard disk drives packed 5 to 10 MB of storage, the equivalent of 2,500 to 5,000 pages of double-spaced typed information, into a device the size of a small shoebox. At the time, a storage capacity of 10 MB was considered too large for a so-called “personal” computer.
The first PCs used removable floppy disks as storage devices almost exclusively. The term “floppy” accurately fit the earliest 8-inch PC diskettes and the 5.25-inch diskettes that succeeded them. The inner disk that holds the data usually is made of Mylar and coated with a magnetic oxide, and the outer, plastic cover, bends easily. The inner disk of today s smaller, 3.5-inch floppies is similarly constructed, but they are housed in a rigid plastic case, which is much more durable than the flexible covering on the larger diskettes.
With the introduction of the IBM PC/XT in 1983, hard disk drives also became a standard component of most personal computers. The descriptor “hard” is used because the inner disks that hold data in a hard drive are made of an aluminum alloy. These disks, called platters, are coated with a much-improved magnetic material and last much longer than a plastic, floppy diskette.
By design, hard disk drives contain vastly greater amounts of data than floppy disks and can store and retrieve it many times faster. Rapid declines in price for hard disk drives meant that by the mid-1980s, a drive of at least 20 MB capacity was a standard component of most PCs. However, floppy diskettes are a cheap and removable storage media, so floppy drives are still included in most PCs as a means for loading software and transporting and archiving data.
Like any other product of the electronics industry, hard drives were subject to the unavoidable law of miniaturization. By the mid-1980s, 5.25-inch form factor drives had shrunk considerably in terms of height. A standard drive measured about three inches high and weighed only a few pounds, while lower capacity “half-height” drives measured only 1.6 inches high
Even as 3.5-inch form factor drives were gaining acceptance, yet a smaller form factor of 2.5 inches appeared on the scene. This was in direct response to the need to further reduce size and weight in portable computers for four to six pound notebook computers. Today’s 2.5-inch drives are about the size of a deck of cards, weigh as little as four ounces, and deliver capacities of more than 500 MB.
Not surprisingly, the march to miniaturization did not stop at 2.5-inch drives. By 1992, a number of 1.8-inch form factor drives appeared, weighing only a few ounces and delivering capacities up to 40 MB. Even a 1.3-inch drive, about the size of a matchbox, was introduced. Of course, smaller form factors in and of themselves are not necessarily better than larger ones. Disk drives with form factors of 2.5 inches and less currently are required only by computer applications where lightweight and compactness are key criteria. Where capacity and cost-per-megabyte are the leading criteria, larger form factor drives are still the preferred choice. For this reason, 3.5-inch drives will continue to dominate for the foreseeable future in desktop PCs and workstations, while 2.5-inch drives will continue to dominate in portable computers.
The drive to smaller form factors is made possible by continuing advances in electronics, disk media, read/write heads, and other disk drive technologies, all of which provide the ability to store ever more data on a given disk surface area. Historically, technology advances have resulted in the doubling of density, and thus the megabyte capacity of a disk, about every 18 months.
Since its introduction, the hard disk drive has become the most common form of mass storage for personal computers. Manufacturers have made immense strides in drive capacity, size, and performance. Today, 3.5-inch, gigabyte drives capable of storing and accessing one billion bytes of data are commonplace in workstations running multimedia, high-end graphics, networking, and communications applications. And, palm-sized drives not only store the equivalent of hundreds of thousands of pages of information, but also retrieve a selected item from all this data in just a few thousandths of a second. What’s more, a disk drive does all of this very inexpensively. By the early 1990s, the cost of purchasing a 200 MB hard disk drive had dropped below $200, or less than one dollar per megabyte.
It is predicted that throughout the future years, the hard drive will become smaller, hold a larger capacity of data, and will be cheaper for the consumer.