PC World Announces 50 years of Hard Drives
PC World announces 50 years of hard drives. Take a look at the history of hard drives development. You may access the article and related links at http://www.pcworld.com/article/id,127105-page,1-c,peripherals/article.html.

Timeline: 50 Years of Hard Drives
A look at the history of hard drives.
Rex Farrance, PC World
Wednesday, September 13, 2006 12:00 AM PDT
Over the past five decades, hard drives have come a long way. Travel through time with us as we chronicle 50 milestones in hard-drive development--from product firsts to new technologies, and everything in between.

Photograph: Courtesy of Hitachi GST
1956: IBM ships the first hard drive, the RAMAC 305, which holds 5MB of data at $10,000 a megabyte. It is as big as two refrigerators and uses 50 24-inch platters. (For the full story and interviews with key players, read "The Hard Drive Turns 50.")
1961: IBM invents heads for disk drives that "fly" on a cushion of air or on "air bearings."
1963: IBM comes up with the first removable hard drive, the 1311, which has six 14-inch platters and holds 2.6MB.
