Hard Drive Analogy

dirtbikerac

New Member
Hey,

I read an analogy a while ago on the internet about Hard Drives and can not find it again! It went something like this:

If the pin on a hard drive was a Boeing 747, and the disk was earth, the plane would be traveling x inches from the ground, traveling at x mph, and counting x blades of grass every x seconds.

It went something like that, and was very fascinating and put a new spin on how amazing today's hard drives are. Anyways, if you find it, please post!

Dirtbikerac
 
You are referring to this article from Tom's Hardware.

From the article:
The dimensions of the head are impressive. With a width of less than a hundred nanometers and a thickness of about ten, it flies above the platter at a speed of up to 15,000 RPM, at a height that’s the equivalent of 40 atoms. If you start multiplying these infinitesimally small numbers, you begin to get an idea of their significance.

Consider this little comparison: if the read/write head were a Boeing 747, and the hard-disk platter were the surface of the Earth:



  • The head would fly at Mach 800
  • At less than one centimeter from the ground
  • And count every blade of grass
  • Making fewer than 10 unrecoverable counting errors in an area equivalent to all of Ireland.
 
The analogy is a little off though, flying 1 cm off the ground is much more difficult when you have hills to contend with...of course it'd be pretty hard to do on level terrain too :P
 
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