Hard Disk Drive Stocks List

Hard Disk Drive Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Jul 3 MRVL Marvell stock continues to gain for seven straight sessions
Jul 3 WDC Western Digital: Value To Be Unlocked With Flash Spinoff
Jul 3 MRVL Nvidia has 3 under-the-radar rivals for AI chip supremacy
Jul 2 MRVL Here's the biggest risk to Nvidia being a $10 trillion juggernaut
Jul 2 MRVL Wall Street’s Best Analyst Bets on These 2 Chip Stocks — Here’s Why You Might Want to Follow His Lead
Jul 2 BRC Zacks.com featured highlights include Leidos, Cabot, Williams-Sonoma, Booz Allen Hamilton and Brady
Jul 2 MRVL 1 Top Chip Stock Reporting Massive AI Growth -- Why Isn't the Stock Rising?
Jul 2 AVT Avnet: Requires A Few More Quarters Before Reaching The Trough
Jul 1 WDC Western Digital moves onto 'Tactical Ideas' list ahead of spinoff: WF
Jul 1 MRVL US semis sector rides rising tide of AI to reach record valuations: Bernstein
Jul 1 WDC A Look At The Intrinsic Value Of Western Digital Corporation (NASDAQ:WDC)
Jul 1 STX Take the Zacks Approach to Beat the Markets: NVIDIA, Seagate, Amkor in Focus
Jul 1 BRC 5 Dividend Stocks to Pick for Solid Growth in the Second Half
Jul 1 MRVL Broadcom And Two More US Stocks Possibly Priced Below Their Estimated True Value
Jun 30 TER S&P 500 Ends First Half Shy Of All-Time Highs. Here Are The Leaders And Laggards — And 5 Stocks That Could Outperform In Next 6 Months
Jun 30 AVT Looking For Yield? Top Tech Stocks With Dividends
Jun 28 MRVL Marvell Technology (MRVL) Gains As Market Dips: What You Should Know
Jun 28 MRVL Investors more focused on Nvidia and AI than election cycle
Jun 28 MRVL AI Boom Boosts Nvidia, AMD, Broadcom: JPMorgan Survey Forecasts Robust Future For Semiconductors
Jun 28 WDC AI Boom Boosts Nvidia, AMD, Broadcom: JPMorgan Survey Forecasts Robust Future For Semiconductors
Hard Disk Drive

A hard disk drive (HDD), hard disk, hard drive, or fixed disk, is an electromechanical data storage device that uses magnetic storage to store and retrieve digital information using one or more rigid rapidly rotating disks (platters) coated with magnetic material. The platters are paired with magnetic heads, usually arranged on a moving actuator arm, which read and write data to the platter surfaces. Data is accessed in a random-access manner, meaning that individual blocks of data can be stored or retrieved in any order and not only sequentially. HDDs are a type of non-volatile storage, retaining stored data even when powered off.Introduced by IBM in 1956, HDDs became the dominant secondary storage device for general-purpose computers by the early 1960s. Continuously improved, HDDs have maintained this position into the modern era of servers and personal computers. More than 200 companies have produced HDDs historically, though after extensive industry consolidation most units are manufactured by Seagate, Toshiba, and Western Digital. HDDs dominate the volume of storage produced (exabytes per year) for servers. Though production is growing slowly, sales revenues and unit shipments are declining because solid-state drives (SSDs) have higher data-transfer rates, higher areal storage density, better reliability, and much lower latency and access times.The revenues for SSDs, most of which use NAND, slightly exceed those for HDDs. Though SSDs have nearly 10 times higher cost per bit, they are replacing HDDs in applications where speed, power consumption, small size, and durability are important.The primary characteristics of an HDD are its capacity and performance. Capacity is specified in unit prefixes corresponding to powers of 1000: a 1-terabyte (TB) drive has a capacity of 1,000 gigabytes (GB; where 1 gigabyte = 1 billion bytes). Typically, some of an HDD's capacity is unavailable to the user because it is used by the file system and the computer operating system, and possibly inbuilt redundancy for error correction and recovery. Also there is confusion regarding storage capacity, since capacities are stated in decimal Gigabytes (powers of 10) by HDD manufacturers, where as some operaring systems report capacities in binary Gibibytes, which results in a smaller number than advertised. Performance is specified by the time required to move the heads to a track or cylinder (average access time) adding the time it takes for the desired sector to move under the head (average latency, which is a function of the physical rotational speed in revolutions per minute), and finally the speed at which the data is transmitted (data rate).
The two most common form factors for modern HDDs are 3.5-inch, for desktop computers, and 2.5-inch, primarily for laptops. HDDs are connected to systems by standard interface cables such as PATA (Parallel ATA), SATA (Serial ATA), USB or SAS (Serial Attached SCSI) cables.

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