Marvellous.Īnd to avoid confusion those newly renamed hard disks and solid state disks in full: What happens to legacy names?
I personally preferred the early Seagate Barracuda series which were all code-named after ski resorts in the USA.
The less said about the disk codenamed ‘Kermit’ the better – it’s not a green disk either. I rather hope the naming is down to the engineers having a little too much spare time and interest in Marvell comic books (a pun for the data recovery followers). Western Digital opt for some suitably macho names for their hard disks, including Cougar, Buccaneer, Mammoth, Firebird and Raider. We use these to identify important parameters associated with the HDD’s firmware. Little does the consumer know that each revision of disk has its own name. Seagate Barracuda and Momentusįortunately for us in the data recovery industry, there are still plenty of silly names given to revisions of hard disk drives. So in technology terms it a bit of a granddad. Other than the utterly bland names they’ve decided on it will be a shame to see the end of the Barracuda name it’s been around since 1996. They will probably consider it incorrect ‘branding’. And as night would follow day, the Barracuda 7200.4 would become a Barracuda 7200.5 and then 7200.6 and so on.Ĭlearly, the marketing chaps at Seagate have decided that naming your hard disk drives after an ugly fish, pipes, and stellar structures are clearly not where it is at these days. You knew what you were getting, a 3.5″ desktop hard disk, spinning at 7200 rpm. For more years than I care to remember it has always been the Seagate Barracuda range.