Dan Ackerman | May 20, 2008

Desktop types are always kicking their laptop counterparts around, stealing
their lunch money, and making fun of their slow and undersized hard drives.
Most laptops have slower 5,400rpm or even 4,200rpm hard drives, usually
between 120GB and 250GB in size. For high-end types, there are 320GB laptop hard
drives, and also 7,200rpm laptop hard drives, but you couldn't get both of those
specs in the same laptop drive [dramatic pause...] until now.
Fujitsu, Hitachi, and Seagate have all recently announced 320GB 7,200rpm
laptop hard drives, but Dell is the first to stick them in a consumer laptop,
using the Seagate drive in the massive 17-inch XPS M1730.
"Laptop users want every bit of capacity, performance, and durability that
desktop PCs deliver," says Michael Wingert, Seagate's executive vice president
and general manager, Personal Compute Business,
in a
press release.
We checked out the Dell Web site and the 320GB drives are available right
now, for US$50 more than a standard 5,400rpm 320GB drive. Look for these to show
up in Alienware laptops next, followed by desktop replacement systems from other
manufacturers.
Via
Crave CNET
To post comments, you need to become a member. It's FREE.