Seagate REJECTED buyout offer for Virident – analyst  Go ahead, WD, pay half a billion for it... we have some top secret tech to get on with  By                               Chris Mellor,                               12th September 2013 theregister.co.uk
  Hard drive supremos Seagate had first refusal on buying out  enterprise flash startup Virident – and turned it down, leaving WD free  to snap it up for  $685m.
  This  little bombshell burst forth from a report on a Seagate Analyst Day by  Stifel Nicolaus' chief, Aaron Rakers. A second juicy nugget was that  Rakers thinks there were other bidders as well as WD for Virident.
       Rakers' report contained yet another storage revelation on top of  those two: Seagate are adopting a little-known disk drive recording  technology called Two Dimensional Magnetic Recording (TDMR).
  Seagate will also, says Rakers, ship a 3D NAND SAS-interface SSD in the first half of 2014. El Reg's storage desk believes this will use Samsung  3D V-NAND chippery.
  Just to put the cherry on that nicely iced cake, Seagate is developing two enterprise SSD controllers internally.
  TDMRSeagate  sees hard disk drive recording technology having an intermediate Two  Dimensional Magnetic Recording (TDMR) technology being used soon, before  moving to HAMR (Heat-Assisted Magnetic Recording). TDMR sounds like a  stop-gap, similar to  shingling (SMR), as it will only produce a 20 per cent or so increase in areal density over SMR.
  The company said nothing at all about TDMR when it introduced shingling and HAMR to journalists at a  briefing in August. It says HAMR product integration could start in 2016, by which time TDMR product integration would be under way.
  TDMR "involves improved signal-to-noise ratio" according to Rakers.  Searching for TDMR info on Seagate's website gets you zip, nada, nothing – at the time of writing, anyway.
  Googling "Two Dimensional Magnetic Recording" gets you lots of papers from data recording conferences. An  HGST one  (PDF, 59 pages), for a presentation in October 2010 to the IEEE  Magnetics Society's Santa Clara Chapter, positions TDMR as an associated  technology for shingling.
  It states:
 
 - Two-Dimensional Magnetic Recording (TDMR) = Shingled Write + 2D Readback
 - Two-Dimensional Readback implies either several revs of latency, or a  read head with three or more immediately adjacent sensor elements.
 - In 2D-readback, a complete ‘picture’ is built up from multiple  tracks - ITI (Inter-Track Interference) is no longer destructive. ITI  contains information about the data that powerful detectors can extract
 
 
   TDMR diagram. (Y. Shiroishi, Intermag 2009, FA-01)
    TDMR is an extension of shingling technology. The  2-dimensionality comes from the read signal information being stored  along the track - dimension 1 - and across tracks, along the radius of  the disk - dimension 2. This, you would think, would slow writing in the  same way as shingling does, but researchers suggest flash-based caching  and buffering could counteract that.
  It seems to the storage desk at El Reg  that it is the combination of SMR and TDMR that is Seagate's response  to HGST's helium-filled drives, which have more platters and heads than  air-filled drives.
  Seagate reckons SMR could generate a 20TB HDD with a 1.2Tbit/in2 areal density. HAMR could produce up to 5Tbit/in2  areal density; that's the big jump that will enable HDDs to regain some  sort of parity between their capacity growth and data storage growth. ® |