Carnegie Mellon develops new sensor to detect computer hard drive failures
New sensor to detect computer hard drives
Carnegie Mellon University researchers have designed a new heat-sensitive sensor to detect computer hard drive failures.
The Carnegie Mellon Critter Temperature Sensor, which attaches to a users desktop computer, is being deployed across campus to monitor the working environment of university computers, according to Michael Bigrigg, a project scientist for the Institute for Complex Engineered Systems (ICES).
“Essentially what we are trying to do is save the life of the computer hard drive. Hard drives get hot and the sensor is designed to pick up the slightest temperature variation,” Bigrigg said. He added that the new sensor will also help researchers understand wasted energy.
Industry analysts report that the average lifespan of a computer hard drive is 600,000 hours or 3.1 years. But Carnegie Mellon researchers predict that they may be able to extend the lifespan of a computer hard drive and save users time and money by sensing how much daily heat a hard drive endures. On average, it costs $80 to $200 to repair a damaged hard drive, according to ICES.
Carnegie Mellon researchers report that the amount of new words, sounds and pictures stored on computer hard rives has almost doubled in the past three years. In global-climate data storage alone, researchers estimate that the volume of recorded information is expected to soar – from 2 billion gigabytes in the year 2000 to 15 billion gigabytes in 2010. A gigabyte is a billion bytes – the equivalent of a billion English letters.
So far, the new sensor, the size of a dime, has been deployed in offices and labs throughout Carnegie Mellons Hamburg Hall.
Media Contact
More Information:
http://www.cmu.edu/All latest news from the category: Information Technology
Here you can find a summary of innovations in the fields of information and data processing and up-to-date developments on IT equipment and hardware.
This area covers topics such as IT services, IT architectures, IT management and telecommunications.
Newest articles
Witness Groundbreaking Research on Achilles Tendon Recovery
Achilles tendon injuries are common but challenging to monitor during recovery due to the limitations of current imaging techniques. Researchers, led by Associate Professor Zeng Nan from the International Graduate…
Why Prevention Is Better Than Cure—A Novel Approach to Infectious Disease Outbreaks
Researchers have come up with a new way to identify more infectious variants of viruses or bacteria that start spreading in humans – including those causing flu, COVID, whooping cough…
Durable, Efficient, Sustainable: The Rise of Cerium Oxide Thermal Switches
Groundbreaking cerium oxide-based thermal switches achieve remarkable performance, transforming heat flow control with sustainable and efficient technology. Cerium Oxide-Based Thermal Switches Revolutionize Heat Flow Control Thermal switches, which electrically control…