How do hard drives work? - Kanawat Senanan

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  • Опубликовано: 20 авг 2024
  • View full lesson: ed.ted.com/less...
    The modern hard drive is an object that can likely hold more information than your local library. But how does it store so much information in such a small space? Kanawat Senanan details the generations of engineers, material scientists, and quantum physicists who influenced the creation of this incredibly powerful and precise tool.
    Lesson by Kanawat Senanan, animation by TED-Ed.

Комментарии • 1,7 тыс.

  • @cmmvvt6872
    @cmmvvt6872 8 лет назад +3164

    I would like to say thank you.... to all those people who put their efforts in making this possible.

    • @vibodhj349
      @vibodhj349 7 лет назад +37

      gratitude rocks. These ted ed guys are awesome!

    • @MisterRandom101
      @MisterRandom101 5 лет назад +62

      That is our purpose as humans. To compound the knowledge and the hard work that has been done by previous generations, to make the future generations better.

    • @Der.Geschichtenerzahler
      @Der.Geschichtenerzahler 5 лет назад +11

      Sadly they do it mostly for money instead of for your benefit

    • @sujitkumarsingh3200
      @sujitkumarsingh3200 5 лет назад +51

      @@Der.Geschichtenerzahler It is a wrong perception. They do it for both benefit and money. They want to be the best in the market. And that is the reason we have good options with competitive pricing.

    • @Safwan.Hossain
      @Safwan.Hossain 4 года назад +12

      @@Der.Geschichtenerzahler Wow ur so edgy and cool. please tell me more about these greedy companies

  • @mreyeball3085
    @mreyeball3085 3 года назад +1929

    It’s so cool how we got from banging stones together to this.

  • @askjt8090
    @askjt8090 8 лет назад +1609

    My mind has just been blown. I am struggling to understand just how complex something that costs less than £50 is. And to think that it can play back video games is absurd.

    • @vegardpig8634
      @vegardpig8634 8 лет назад +14

      Yep

    • @zamzamazawarma928
      @zamzamazawarma928 8 лет назад +25

      Geopolitics, that's why it's so cheap.

    • @askjt8090
      @askjt8090 8 лет назад +3

      - Zamazawarma
      Haha! I guess so!

    • @Pedrosa2541
      @Pedrosa2541 7 лет назад +55

      +-Boman an spoderman srik bick
      No, bullshit, the true reason is economy developtment and free trade. The companies need to be more efficient each generation due to market concurrency. If we want more of these inventions, we need to support free market

    • @askjt8090
      @askjt8090 7 лет назад +5

      Antonio Pedro Pedrosa
      Ok, so why are you telling ME this? It was - Zamazawarma who spoke about geopolitical stuff, not me. But I guess you're right, although I'm not really into economics and money...

  • @ssebinnnyy
    @ssebinnnyy 5 лет назад +218

    To all the scientists, engineers and physicists who made this possible and helped us usher a new era of information, we really appreciate you.

    • @buizelmeme6288
      @buizelmeme6288 Год назад +3

      I wonder if there's a website that lists all of the names that contributed??

    • @peterdavids31
      @peterdavids31 Год назад +16

      Did you forget to add a "thank you" at the end of your comment?

    • @thematrix1101
      @thematrix1101 8 месяцев назад +1

      It’s sad that there’s a lot of them whose work changed the world yet they are unknown by most people

  • @starlightsall
    @starlightsall 4 года назад +179

    This is one of those things that can restore your faith in humanity and makes you feel hopeful about the future.
    Incredible video!

    • @andreask_me2683
      @andreask_me2683 2 года назад +3

      from the future: sorry to disappoint you, it is a no.

    • @Dowlphin
      @Dowlphin 7 месяцев назад

      Really?? Technological advances in how much data we can store fills you with faith for humankind? - Ugh, damn techno-religious power trip is part of the whole problem.

    • @F255123
      @F255123 6 месяцев назад

      @@Dowlphin Those 'technological advances in how much data we can store' directly cause lives to be saved. The field of medicine would not exist without technological advancement.

    • @Dowlphin
      @Dowlphin 6 месяцев назад

      @@F255123 Technology is a con, a borrowed-power trip, externalizing it and thereby distracting us from developing our human potential. All too often, modern technology only manages the problems we only have because of that system that pushes it.
      It is very telling that not even the gain-of-function scandal has taught people anything.

  • @benjaminwilde152
    @benjaminwilde152 8 лет назад +4468

    Explain SSD next, please.

    • @Andy-js5jy
      @Andy-js5jy 8 лет назад +32

      +Benjamin Wilde pls SSD NEXT

    • @johneydermon1
      @johneydermon1 8 лет назад +54

      Agree! I would like an explanation on SSD as well.

    • @loriefranceschi2590
      @loriefranceschi2590 8 лет назад +40

      +Benjamin Wilde SSD Equals Solid State Drives? Asking just to be sure. Thanks Family member got a new computer a couple of months ago and it has a Solid State Drive

    • @johneydermon1
      @johneydermon1 8 лет назад +54

      Lorie Franceschi Yes, SSD means Solid State Drive. They don't have a spinning disk as Hard Drives but I don't know about the inner workings of it.

    • @benjaminwilde152
      @benjaminwilde152 8 лет назад +11

      Lorie Franceschi Yes, that's what SSD stands for.

  • @decryptroblox
    @decryptroblox 5 лет назад +775

    2010: 500gb is a lot
    2019: 2tb is awesome and 16 tb is maximum
    2087: I’m rocking a 1000 petabyte SSD and a 2000 petabyte portable HDD from seagate

    • @yeoldekrabs3436
      @yeoldekrabs3436 4 года назад +85

      In 2087 we wouldn’t use any HDDs anymore, since it will probably be replaced by SSDs that are faster and safer

    • @focus-mo1nq
      @focus-mo1nq 4 года назад +124

      @@yeoldekrabs3436 it is possible that in 2087 data will be stored with superior storage technology. SSDs could be considered as oldschool by then.

    • @yeoldekrabs3436
      @yeoldekrabs3436 4 года назад +4

      @focus Yeah, right

    • @flying_Night_slasher
      @flying_Night_slasher 4 года назад +10

      @@yeoldekrabs3436 it would go mainstream if they can make them last longer than HDD's

    • @tahabashir3779
      @tahabashir3779 4 года назад +71

      I'm pretty sure owning an SSD in 2087 would be like owning a floppy disc in 2020.

  • @weegie3343
    @weegie3343 Год назад +59

    It’s just incredible how MUCH data can be crammed in such a small space. We went from floppy disks with a whopping 1.44 mb of storage to 100gb hdd’s in less than 15 years

    • @sloopy420
      @sloopy420 Год назад +3

      and now we have sd cards that are even small that hold a terabyte

    • @thehuman2861
      @thehuman2861 Год назад +1

      Just wow 😲

    • @Quimper111
      @Quimper111 Год назад +1

      We recorded computer games on casette tapes when i was young.

    • @weegie3343
      @weegie3343 Год назад +1

      @@Quimper111 yea, I know (still use cassettes since i’m weird but never for data storage)

    • @stephensnell5707
      @stephensnell5707 Год назад

      @@sloopy420 SD CARDS CAN HOLD MORE THAN 1 TERABYTE UP TO 2 TERABYTES EVEN

  • @Ndo01
    @Ndo01 8 лет назад +211

    This vid really makes me realize how little I know.

  • @anatolesokol
    @anatolesokol 4 года назад +117

    "how hard drive works" - they work really hard, all that drives...

  • @709zzy
    @709zzy 8 лет назад +151

    Technology is amazing, I'm so appreciative of the world we live in.

  • @ArizonaJewell
    @ArizonaJewell 2 года назад +6

    HDDs are practically magic. I’ve always found them super fascinating personally. The fact that we have technology that can store and recover a mind boggling amount of data on a small little disk that is spinning at a similar RPM to the average car engine is just incredible. What’s really cool to see is slow motion footage of an HDD seeking. In real time, the head moves across the platter in the blink of an eye, but in slow motion you can see it make precise, tiny little movements across the spinning disk to read and write data.

  • @Arrviasto
    @Arrviasto 8 лет назад +1349

    As a educational channel you should use metric system. Or at least both metric and imperial.

    • @DreadKyller
      @DreadKyller 8 лет назад +57

      +Arrvi eh, they did mention a lot of metric measurements, such as 4 nm, nanometers are metric, since they're based off of the meter.
      Metric is based off of universal constants such as planck's length, imperial is based off of common measurements from objects used in common living. Metric is based off of science, imperial is based off of human interaction with the world. While imperial isn't very good to do exact measurements with, it's easier to compare imperial measurements to certain types of objects are they are more easily divisible because the measurement is based off sizes of objects that are related. Personally i feel both have their place. I do agree that the metric system is probably better, but sometimes it's easier to use the imperial system when talking about specific sizes that may be 1.7683 of some size in metric. I guess it would be nice to say "x cm (or y inches)", I guess it depends on who's doing the talk though.

    • @Arrviasto
      @Arrviasto 8 лет назад +65

      +DreadKyller I see your point. But for me, metric system is more intuitive as it is being used as only one in most of the world, including my country. Imperial is more intuitive for people who were taught to use it. In this case I'd still go for metric, because it's simpler and _can_ be intuitive. Other thing is mixing them. In this video some measures were given in inches only and some in metric units - that's even more confusing for both groups.
      There's only one place where I can understand and accept non-metric systems - long distance navigation. I do some sailing from time to time, so I had to use nautical miles and knots. These are ok, because they are based on geographical coordinates and are easier to use with simple tools and a map which might be crucial in case of electronic navigation failure. I think it is also applies to flights.
      I also know that discussion on this is pointless, so I'm not going to argue further.

    • @8749236
      @8749236 8 лет назад +13

      +Arrvi I agree measurement system needs to be standarized, there are at least one engineering disasters and one airplane incident merely caused by the different measuring system that different engineers used.. e.g.: Airplane run out of fuel in mid air because they done their fuel calculation with pounds instead of kilograms while the calculating tools are expecting kilograms as unit..
      e.g.2: Mars Climate Orbiter suffered unplanned rapid disintegration while performing aerobrake over Mar's atmosphere. Because one software NASA used to supply parameters to calculate orbit maneuvers supplied non-metric units while the orbit calculation expected metric units, the orbiter flew too close into Mar's atmosphere and is destroyed. Successfully converting it into a shooting star at the cost of 300 million USD.
      However, I am not sure whether we should discard other metric system once and for all, because I am not sure what the side effect will be. Maybe those system are better than metric system at some aspect. I am just not sure, so I have no comment on that (not agree nor disagree).

    • @DreadKyller
      @DreadKyller 8 лет назад +9

      Dennis Liu For fields like that metric is always used now, for those specific reasons. Even here in the US we use the metric system every time a measurement has to be precise or coordinated with anyone else, pretty much any field of science uses the metric system no matter where you live.

    • @8749236
      @8749236 8 лет назад +1

      DreadKyller That sounds good =D, hopefully no more that type of disasters in the future.

  • @CinematicTechnologies
    @CinematicTechnologies 8 лет назад +390

    Wow, we truly are living in the future.

    • @anti_MATT_er
      @anti_MATT_er 8 лет назад +72

      +Ethan Swords We just don't realize it because our concept of the future changes as we move into each "future."

    • @CinematicTechnologies
      @CinematicTechnologies 8 лет назад +14

      +Matt Nguyen #deep

    • @anti_MATT_er
      @anti_MATT_er 8 лет назад +1

      Ethan Swords ;)

    • @LoSpotItaliano
      @LoSpotItaliano 8 лет назад +20

      Ethan Swords lol, I'm watching this in 2083 and, jeez, your technology is sooo archaic. You store 600 GB per inch? Wow... Today we use DNA cells to store information and you can store millions of GB on 1 inch. Oh, by the way, we don't usually use GB, we use ZB now. For example a regular holographic picture is few EB (exabyte) now.

    • @vibodhj349
      @vibodhj349 7 лет назад +2

      Yes, turning human beings and animals into storage hubs as these minerals aren't enough. Well, this doesn't sound like technology, sounds more like globalization.

  • @allanjasonmburu2186
    @allanjasonmburu2186 4 года назад +21

    amazing. lets give a round of applause to all the engineers and scientists in the world

  • @satrangirasoi2185
    @satrangirasoi2185 3 года назад +9

    Man everything can be innovated to a while new level🤯. From being able to make 2mb ram the size of our modern pc cabinet to making the whole pc fit in just 2% of the space and storing millions of time more, it's just beautiful, how much humans have grown

  • @samysaid1989
    @samysaid1989 8 лет назад +1980

    How.....................................I mean....How?
    How are humans able to invent, or even come up with stuff like this?

    • @joshhunt955
      @joshhunt955 8 лет назад +146

      +samy said through evolution. and from the knowledge from the past.

    • @samysaid1989
      @samysaid1989 8 лет назад +173

      +Josh Hunt Ohhhhhhhhhhhhhh... thanks for clearing that up....

    • @tensukexD
      @tensukexD 8 лет назад +33

      Intelligence

    • @noahwilliams8996
      @noahwilliams8996 8 лет назад +32

      +samy said SCIENCE!

    • @Synodalian
      @Synodalian 8 лет назад +172

      +samy said
      Science and mathematics. Science is used to make discoveries on how our universe physically works, while mathematics (also a kind of science) makes discoveries on the correlations, connections, and parallels between logical and formal patterns and concepts. When you unite the two, you get magic....I mean technology.
      Also, humans came up with this through centuries of scientific, philosophical, and _mostly_ mathematical insight. We stand on the shoulders of giants...

  • @jaytwo96
    @jaytwo96 7 лет назад +18

    This really is mind blowing how well all of these things work, and how cheap they are to us all. We truly live in a remarkable time.

    • @TucsonDude
      @TucsonDude 2 года назад +1

      We still don't have flying cars, yet. Popular Mechanics from the 1950s said we would.

    • @ba.chin.em.ba.tam.
      @ba.chin.em.ba.tam. 2 года назад +2

      @@TucsonDude It's coming, but not until you start building 3D lanes for them 🤣 the idea of flying does not mean you can just fly however you want, still gonna have lanes and traffic lights (in 3D), and of course flying laws.

  • @wootle
    @wootle 4 года назад +8

    What absolutely amazing clever people out there. Whom we owe so much to for the tech we use every day without a second thought. To all those generations of engineers and the current gen giving us SSDs, smartphones, GDDR5 , GPUS and so much more - thank you.

  • @uppercut70
    @uppercut70 7 дней назад

    It’s been eight years since this video has been uploaded and I’m wondering how far the technologies come in that short amount of time. Incredible.

  • @gauravdabholkar7631
    @gauravdabholkar7631 3 года назад +44

    Watching this video after 5 years gives the same hit!
    Imagine how far today's tech has reached 😯

  • @AdarshPalSingh
    @AdarshPalSingh 8 лет назад +6

    Amazing! Nowadays, memory chips/cards roughly the size of our nails have storage capacity comparable to these bulk hard drives. Please make a video on their structure and working!

    • @stephensnell5707
      @stephensnell5707 8 месяцев назад

      You prune,Hard Drives aren't that bulky

  • @SemenTheSailor
    @SemenTheSailor 7 месяцев назад +1

    It’s crazy how far storage tech has come. It’s been 8 years since this video released and HDD are all but obsolete.
    Today you can get an SSD with a 100TB capacity that is smaller, silent and faster than any HDD. (Though it will cost you $40,000)

  • @thedepression950
    @thedepression950 2 года назад +2

    I asked my teacher about this and she said "it is like how your brain remembers". And i said to her "i dont know that too!". Then i went to my biology teacher and asked how our brain remembers. She said" its with the help of neurons" but i dont know how neurons do that! I know they take and give electrical pulses or what ever but that doesnt explains how they "save" that memory. So i just gave up cause teachers doesnt know about this. They just learn what ever they learn and never question it. Then try to teach us.
    I swear to God RUclips videos are more educative than school.

  • @RebeccaS1231
    @RebeccaS1231 8 лет назад +12

    Wow, its amazing how durable they are given how easily it seems that something could go wrong!

  • @flameBMW245
    @flameBMW245 4 года назад +9

    Any of us, litteraly any of us, could of thought of that, most of would think its impossible, but it was made.
    Thats the magic of human thinking, if were put our ape brains together, we could think of anything

  • @vahehov402
    @vahehov402 7 лет назад +1

    I have never seen such a clear explanation anywhere. Truly great job!

  • @AdamDallas
    @AdamDallas 5 месяцев назад

    It's absolutely staggering that this technology even works to me! Never mind the sheer innovation and mind boggling leaps and bounds that it's come in 60 odd years. Hats off to the people who invented this stuff. To all of them, thank you for your astounding minds.

  • @buyanaa0327
    @buyanaa0327 7 лет назад +8

    Is it weird that I almost cried watching this? Together, we build better, stronger and more advanced world.

  • @bdotashu
    @bdotashu 5 лет назад +28

    Generations of engineering, huh?
    I think this is the time when gratitude hits me hard with kindness.

  • @sebdouse6970
    @sebdouse6970 2 года назад

    I cannot even begin to understand the fundamentals of how this stuff works. Ted Talks like these make me want to learn everything on the planet.

  • @santruptmanjaragi4219
    @santruptmanjaragi4219 5 лет назад +2

    Just imagining how our world has changed from the time of adam and eve where noboboy even knew who they are, what they are...and now we make such an unbelievable gadgets....How?

  • @JonYodice
    @JonYodice 8 лет назад +3

    "Dad, can I have a hard drive?"
    "Go back to hell where you were born"

  • @PHSYKEDSYPHER
    @PHSYKEDSYPHER Год назад +3

    thanks, this is helping me with my school research

  • @BioChemistryWizard
    @BioChemistryWizard 7 месяцев назад +1

    Hard drives are so weird to me because they are an old invention yet the science of them feels like something at the end stage of human technology. Like they seem so much more intricate and complicated than 100% of other technological objects.

  • @WestHaddnin
    @WestHaddnin 4 года назад

    Idgaf. This is magic. I cannot wrap my head how zeros and ones turn into pictures and videos and all that information.

  • @andrest9122
    @andrest9122 2 года назад +3

    You're telling me people looked at rocks, water, and air and thought "Imma make Bluetooth". Crazy.

  • @BrickTamlandOfficial
    @BrickTamlandOfficial 8 лет назад +1380

    an inspirational ted talk for the thing that holds all my porn.

  • @Dowlphin
    @Dowlphin 7 месяцев назад

    Modern harddrive technology is like sculpting objects using a phalanx of titanium nano-handaxes.
    Also, the Quack Braun fax machine really revolutionized the way we transmit information.

  • @greenthunder1000
    @greenthunder1000 2 года назад

    it sounds so incredibly advanced and powerful, and yet it only costs like $90 for a good 4tb one. hard drives were god's gift to man.

  • @Hc-in8gp
    @Hc-in8gp 3 года назад +29

    The people who suprised with how complicated it is, if only they knew how CPU works...

    • @null5573
      @null5573 2 года назад +1

      Understanding CPU isn't complicated though. It is just a lot of simple stuffs working together.

    • @ronixdash123
      @ronixdash123 2 года назад

      @@null5573 Maybe understanding it isn't hard but its work is much more complex and on much smaller scale than HDDs

  • @Scott123180
    @Scott123180 8 лет назад +9

    That was the best Ted-ed video I've ever seen. The production quality was phenomenal. Definitely wear headphones with this video to get the full experience. Great Job!

  • @mkks4559
    @mkks4559 Год назад +1

    I watched this video in hopes that I would learn something entirely new or it would help me in Computer Science, but at the same time, I stopped doing my Computer Science homework to watch this video.

  • @TheSmilePerson
    @TheSmilePerson Год назад +1

    I’m literally holding a seagate barracuda 1TB HDD in my hands while watching this video to see how much technology has evolved thanks to generations of scientists.

  • @harku123
    @harku123 5 лет назад +4

    It's amazing to see that information stored on a hard drive is still physically there and it's not just some magical information stored in some magical plane of existence. It's just so small it's invisible to us. Absolutely amazing

  • @westzapwood8697
    @westzapwood8697 7 лет назад +135

    all of this so that a pesky little boy could play GTA 5 on it...

    • @concon6012
      @concon6012 4 года назад +6

      0-0

    • @MartynDerg
      @MartynDerg 3 года назад +4

      *laughs in SSD*

    • @deadchannel5933
      @deadchannel5933 3 года назад +5

      @@MartynDerg
      *laughs in SSD and HDD*

    • @deadchannel5933
      @deadchannel5933 3 года назад +1

      @Lord AB Dude you clearly don't even know what I was talking about, lol
      And even if you do, you don't know what I meant! One guy cries in HDD only, some other guy laughs in SSD only and I laugh out loud in both SSD and HDD so I have high boot speeds and ****** but I also have a lot of space for games.

    • @Djanbari
      @Djanbari 3 года назад

      @@deadchannel5933 h

  • @eubertandrei1774
    @eubertandrei1774 3 года назад +1

    Videos like this reminds me how smart people can get.

  • @el-bariklucian5160
    @el-bariklucian5160 2 года назад

    I need all the attention I can summon to understand this. And appreciate it.

  • @ananya.a04
    @ananya.a04 4 года назад +5

    This was such an informative video! Hats off to the scientists who work day and night to make futuristic ideas a reality!

  • @frankdantuono2594
    @frankdantuono2594 8 лет назад +136

    Great episode, but the music was a bit too loud and distracting at parts.

    • @DonnaMSchmid
      @DonnaMSchmid 8 лет назад +8

      +Frank Dantuono I was going to comment the exact same thing... The music volume was WAY off for this video!

  • @IvanMatyushov
    @IvanMatyushov 8 лет назад

    this channel is the best educational channel ive seen, even though crash course helps with tests, i just like channel alot better

  • @14dayztimeap8
    @14dayztimeap8 5 месяцев назад +1

    A great video which provides learning for newbie in Computer Science.

  • @Altricksss
    @Altricksss 7 лет назад +98

    So wait, what happens when you delete stuff, does the HDD backtrack and somehow demagnetize the bits to clear more space on the disk?

    • @petmach
      @petmach 7 лет назад +251

      No if you delete data the disk doesn't actually erase them, It just marks the area on which the data is stored as being free. Until it actually overwrites it with some new data the "deleted" information is still there. This is why some software can recover your data even if its been deleted.

    • @DRSDavidSoft
      @DRSDavidSoft 7 лет назад +25

      But if you use a "shredder" software, it more or less erases data permanently by overwriting multiple times on the bit.

    • @quarkyquasar893
      @quarkyquasar893 7 лет назад +22

      I assume that "Shredder" software you mean would just corrupt the data beyond any possible means to recover.

    • @cgaccount3669
      @cgaccount3669 6 лет назад +3

      Defrag the drive to actually overwrite the deleted data. Format and fill with new data if you really want to delete something.

    • @KevinChar
      @KevinChar 6 лет назад +21

      Very informative reply from you. Thank you. But what about those disks that come in as new? the data areas are neutral? or it has been randomly charged?

  • @msrikavya9651
    @msrikavya9651 4 года назад +4

    I was scrolling when reading the thumbnail and I understood, "how hard, drives work?"

  • @canaufirchauhan3360
    @canaufirchauhan3360 4 года назад +1

    Really how this people had made this nd how we take this for granted , really grateful for such invention. Hopping are lifetime easier.

  • @shaswatjha
    @shaswatjha 6 лет назад

    Cant believe that ted ed did the mistake of increasing bg sound so much that voice becomes nearly unhearable

  • @CybeargPlays
    @CybeargPlays 8 лет назад +4

    Fascinating, thanks! I thought the background music was a bit loud and obnoxious in this one, though.

  • @Garbaz
    @Garbaz 8 лет назад +554

    y u no metric ? At least on screen...

    • @NaXter24R
      @NaXter24R 8 лет назад +139

      I still don't understand why in 2015 people still don't use metric.

    • @zaviusfirerave
      @zaviusfirerave 8 лет назад +61

      +NaXter24R 'murica.

    • @stm7810
      @stm7810 8 лет назад +71

      +zaviusfirerave Well Screw Murica! inches and miles are stupid.

    • @guttfunk
      @guttfunk 8 лет назад +36

      +Campmus I think what mr McIntyre meant to say is that it is silly to take pride in an antiquated and arbitrary system when the rest of the world is moving towards rationalisation and cooperation

    • @nhanvu8170
      @nhanvu8170 8 лет назад +2

      +Luca B Customary STUPIDER than metric

  • @logancater7373
    @logancater7373 Год назад

    I didn’t know how a hard drives worked but this wasn’t this would never cross my mind

  • @menkiguo7805
    @menkiguo7805 3 года назад

    What a era we are living in!

  • @thecoreymarks
    @thecoreymarks 8 лет назад +212

    how do solid state drives work

    • @OG1Tipsy
      @OG1Tipsy 8 лет назад +19

      yes..comparison video, for flash,solid extc.

    • @heyitsmejm4792
      @heyitsmejm4792 8 лет назад +8

      +TheCorey Marks SSD's IMO is like a flashdrive with more storage and improved speed.... but the process would be "less" complicated than the HDD's since it has a moving mechanism that has to sync with the read and write header not to mention the "magnetic" thing part...

    • @lemonke3774
      @lemonke3774 4 года назад +3

      Think of it as a box with a large SD card in it. That’s basically what it is because they both use flash memory and don’t have any moving parts lol.

    • @MarcABrown-tt1fp
      @MarcABrown-tt1fp 4 года назад +2

      Much more simple in operation, but harder to manufacture.

  • @RuslanSokolovskyRussia
    @RuslanSokolovskyRussia 8 лет назад +195

    music so loud(

  • @tfamidoinghere6134
    @tfamidoinghere6134 3 года назад

    This Ted guy been reading my mind lately...and i love it

  • @kirangowda6531
    @kirangowda6531 3 года назад

    Tears rolled out after watching this is it just me or is this normal to be so overwhelmed.

  • @GustavoMaciel
    @GustavoMaciel 8 лет назад +7

    loving the music

  • @InderjitSingh12
    @InderjitSingh12 8 лет назад +158

    all hail Science !!!

  • @spideken123
    @spideken123 Год назад +1

    Its just amazing to know this for the first time.

  • @pjanoo6973
    @pjanoo6973 2 года назад

    This is absolutely mind-blowing. I always thought they worked like a record by etching into it so I always wondered how you can erase data? Just jaw dropping how far we have come as a species

  • @ryeofoatmeal
    @ryeofoatmeal 7 лет назад +7

    - now i know why my hard drive make a spinning sound whenever i connect it XD
    - so basically a picture is made of 0 1 bits... so does video.. but its moving... *mind blown*
    - an HD picture could take 20Mb and above.. can you imagine how many bits are there x___x

    • @videotape2959
      @videotape2959 7 лет назад +7

      Video does not really "move", it's a sequence of pictures or frames.
      20MBytes equals 160000000 bits.

    • @honkhonk8009
      @honkhonk8009 3 года назад

      Look at how videos are encoded. They dont even use multiple pictures for it.

  • @famsu5654
    @famsu5654 8 лет назад +28

    My current 3Tb External Hard Drive is not enough for me.
    Where's my 20TB Hard Drive???
    I want it NOW!

    • @roneyandrade6287
      @roneyandrade6287 8 лет назад +1

      +Ferman Sensei IN 6 YEARS OR LESS

    • @Forflies
      @Forflies 8 лет назад +1

      +Ferman Sensei I want a 20TB SSD :p

    • @theshun53
      @theshun53 8 лет назад

      +Ferman Sensei wow bro,ive using a 160hdd for 4years and counting and ive only used up less than 50gbs,just imagine how long a 3tb would last me

    • @Forflies
      @Forflies 8 лет назад

      TRO LINU I do RUclips and a lot of my other work on my PC. I actually have a bit over 3TB in total and trust me, it burns up quickly. It also doesn't help if you are a gamer lol

    • @justinus64
      @justinus64 8 лет назад

      +Entrt4inment OR a Professional Editor

  • @mewmewg
    @mewmewg 3 года назад

    1. How is data written and read on the platter? 2. What makes the arm move? 3. How does Faraday's law work in the hard drive? 4What is the gap between the head and the disk surface? 5. What is the function of a recirculating filter?

  • @kathy9124
    @kathy9124 4 года назад

    So much information packed in 5 minutes

  • @StudioPowerful
    @StudioPowerful 6 лет назад +70

    4:41 he is talking about fidget spinners not hard drives...

    • @giovannip8600
      @giovannip8600 5 лет назад +1

      Lmao, thanks for the 10 second laugh

    • @cobiguy
      @cobiguy 5 лет назад +2

      Haha

    • @aorusaki
      @aorusaki 4 года назад

      Loool

    • @rhonenathaniellapas560
      @rhonenathaniellapas560 3 года назад

      lmao

    • @StudioPowerful
      @StudioPowerful 3 года назад

      @@rhonenathaniellapas560 I read this back to see if it was cringe being 2 years old and all. Actually was funnier than I expected

  • @JuanPabloCarbajal
    @JuanPabloCarbajal 8 лет назад +8

    it would be nice that these videos embrace the SI (international system of units)...

  • @Tremor244
    @Tremor244 6 лет назад

    A plane flying 1 mm around the earth in 0.25 seconds and counting every blade of grass, that representation of an hdd just blew my mind.

  • @user-ef8gu4cz1g
    @user-ef8gu4cz1g 4 месяца назад

    The first hard drive developed was 300 million times smaller than the capacity of the current hard drive. There have been several technologies in the development of these hard drives. A typical example is thin film lithography process technology, which has led engineers to reduce readers and recording devices. Recently, there is a technology called heating magnetic recording, and this technology can store a lot of information by reducing the instantaneous magnetoresistance of heating at a specific point with a laser. I am looking forward to the development of hard drives in the future.10926

  • @23Khameo
    @23Khameo 4 года назад +3

    I remember back when I was 8 years old (1995) my “big” hdd was 500Mb and it felt like I’d never use it up. Now I’m 950Gb deep just in my iTunes library and I feel like a 4Tb hdd is not enough. How times have changed huh.

    • @flying_Night_slasher
      @flying_Night_slasher 4 года назад

      Trust me I used my 1tb HDD on my PC within a year of having the PC for me I need like 500 Yoddabytes (I don't think I spelled Yoddabytes right)

  • @harshilagarwal6295
    @harshilagarwal6295 6 лет назад +3

    My head hurts after so much knowledge

    • @programmer6761
      @programmer6761 6 лет назад

      If that's the case, then Ted Ed is not for you.

    • @tgmtf5963
      @tgmtf5963 5 лет назад

      my entire brain just escaped from my head, been cahsing it now.

  • @XxAnimeReaperxX
    @XxAnimeReaperxX 3 года назад

    literally sat here and randomly thought "how does a physical hard drive read and write data at the same time and how does it record data on the hard disk", then found this video.

  • @notsosmart3288
    @notsosmart3288 4 года назад +8

    HDD : I HELPED HUMANS FOR MANY DECADE .
    SDD : *ok boomer*

  • @JonnyDarcko
    @JonnyDarcko 8 лет назад +5

    Hold on while I go change my pants.

    • @magnvsmarcvs
      @magnvsmarcvs 8 лет назад +4

      +Schoolidge
      good , I´m not the only one who jerked out on this .

    • @vibodhj349
      @vibodhj349 7 лет назад +1

      sapiosexuals

  • @JollySpaceCow
    @JollySpaceCow 4 года назад +1

    These are mass produced and used every day in lots of places!

  • @anshtheunbeatable8462
    @anshtheunbeatable8462 3 года назад

    My mind has blown into filming pieces

  • @CoriSparx
    @CoriSparx 8 лет назад +5

    It's 2016. Baby boomers will whine: _"Where's my hovercar? Where's my robot butler? Where's my freaking jetpack!?"_ at the drop of a hat.
    When they do, I show them this. Computer technology as it is today is SO much more advanced and "futuristic" than a jetpack or hovercar. It's so futuristic that no one even saw it coming!

    • @mambodog5322
      @mambodog5322 5 лет назад

      It's 2018. ruclips.net/video/fvu5FxKuqdQ/видео.html The future is soon, my friend.

    • @tahabashir3779
      @tahabashir3779 4 года назад

      Ok boomer.

  • @madhavbadhwar2486
    @madhavbadhwar2486 3 года назад +5

    Imagine slow speeds for file transfer
    This post was made by m.2 ssd gang

    • @randomthingsposted583
      @randomthingsposted583 3 года назад

      Imagine losing all your data when the SSD breaks
      This post was made by Hardrive gang.

  • @nitingdagaya4204
    @nitingdagaya4204 6 лет назад

    Amused !! Science and contributions of decades,
    and with background music I was in the flow.

  • @naqiyahmulachelah5668
    @naqiyahmulachelah5668 5 лет назад +1

    the first time i clicked this video i knew it would be crazy but i didn't know it would be THAT crazy. totally mind blown!

    • @nunyadambidniss
      @nunyadambidniss 5 лет назад

      But Solid State is so much-MORE BORING!!
      NUTHIN'Beats Fine Mechanical Engineering :D
      The HDD aint goin'NOWHERE anytime soon ^_^

  • @QuethLevi
    @QuethLevi 8 лет назад +30

    please turn down the background music in your next video. bad soundmixing

    • @LazyOtaku
      @LazyOtaku 8 лет назад +7

      blame your harddrive. :p

    • @amys3168
      @amys3168 8 лет назад

      I agree. I had a hard time hearing his voice. And not all of the videos are like this.

    • @InfiniteRhombus
      @InfiniteRhombus 8 лет назад

      +Reãuvi M. get a better set of headphones or speakers, i can hear it just fine.

  • @Ultrasound700
    @Ultrasound700 8 лет назад +3

    What about an SSD?

  • @levivegafranciscosr7202
    @levivegafranciscosr7202 Год назад

    In my advancing age,it could be hard for me to understand even the simplest details.but i am thankful that i have experienced the advancement of electronics that have bettered our everyday lives.

    • @hemaloid419
      @hemaloid419 11 месяцев назад

      I'm not..I wish we could go back to the 70s 80s or 90s.

  • @mit3da9yo
    @mit3da9yo 5 лет назад +1

    I shed some tears. Thank you engineers! Because of you, I can play skyrim with mods.

  • @michaelmoritz7915
    @michaelmoritz7915 7 лет назад +39

    Narrator: ...60 GB per in^2
    Me: In normal units, please.

    • @bathtub_farter
      @bathtub_farter 5 лет назад +3

      In^2 means you take a point and either move right OR left after every inch until you reach where you started. Basically it is area of a square. And we fit 600GB in 1inch^2. That's pretty badass. By the way it is in normal units.

    • @mambodog5322
      @mambodog5322 5 лет назад +8

      @@bathtub_farter No, in metric, not your freedom units.

    • @mambodog5322
      @mambodog5322 5 лет назад +18

      @@bathtub_farter Because It would be handy to understand the size of these measurements without having to do math. 95% of the world already uses metric, so cooperate already.

    • @mcfreezyyaboi8389
      @mcfreezyyaboi8389 5 лет назад +1

      Murica wont cooperate

    • @thearmyofiron
      @thearmyofiron 5 лет назад

      @@mambodog5322 yup, would be nice to be able to imagine it

  • @gigatroller
    @gigatroller 8 лет назад +6

    How about a usb? Is that working the same way?

    • @stoltheds7698
      @stoltheds7698 8 лет назад +6

      +D88888888Mc Flash drive like USB, SD and SSD are a totaly different thing: there are'nt any moving parts.

    • @HiAdrian
      @HiAdrian 8 лет назад +5

      *+D88888888Mc* USB is an interface, not a storage medium. You're denser than a modern hard drive.

    • @mistercaptain6102
      @mistercaptain6102 8 лет назад +2

      +D88888888Mc They use flash storage, the same storage SSDs use, a lot of the comments are asking for a video on that, I'm interested too, I know it uses differences in voltage levels throughout its many small circuits to store ones and zeros,

  • @andreask_me2683
    @andreask_me2683 2 года назад

    finally i found a detailed video how the magnetic bits look a like and how it works. thank you

  • @i-m-alien
    @i-m-alien 5 лет назад

    Hard drive working understanding
    1….hard disk have stack of spinning disks in it.
    2….with a recording head flying over each disk surface
    3….the disk is coated with the film of microscopic magnetised metals grains
    4….the data is recorded in magnetic pattern formed by groups by those tiny grains
    5….each group is called as a bit which can only absorb 1 and 0
    7….magnet reader and magnetic writer heads are two components fixed in hard disk…..and it flyes 5nm above disk surface about the width of two strains of dna
    8….1 square inch can hold 1gb of data
    9….by changing the direction of arrow in recording from longitude or horizontal to perpendicular or vertical allowing 1square inch to hold 1tb of data

  • @bas182341
    @bas182341 7 лет назад +5

    what i dont get is....how do they make such things when the components are so small you cant even see it with you eyes...

    • @Nothing_serious
      @Nothing_serious 7 лет назад

      Amnesia Microscopes and magnifying glass

    • @quarkyquasar893
      @quarkyquasar893 7 лет назад +2

      Not microscopes or magnifying glasses. It's mostly through properties of chemistry and physics.

    • @vibodhj349
      @vibodhj349 7 лет назад

      Yes, but with microscopes or magnifying glasses.

    • @ANKITKUMAR-pc8uz
      @ANKITKUMAR-pc8uz 5 лет назад

      Nano technology

    • @thearmyofiron
      @thearmyofiron 5 лет назад

      Laser

  • @user-pn9qp1sr3e
    @user-pn9qp1sr3e 8 лет назад +36

    yay scientists.

  • @jordank6961
    @jordank6961 4 года назад

    I never thought i needed to learn this. I am happy

  • @candidatesvoice8826
    @candidatesvoice8826 7 лет назад

    Thank you so much! Being an INTP, it was fucking frustrating to find a single source to explain the basics in a simplistic fashion. You guys are amazing!

  • @biohazard737
    @biohazard737 8 лет назад +19

    I'm still confused how it works... It kinda just talked about the evolution of the hard drive

    • @biohazard737
      @biohazard737 8 лет назад +4

      +Dank Maths it didn't get specific enough like how it reads a picture file vs a video and how it is able to access multiple files at once, etc. how far it has come is a nice tidbit, but it should focus on the topic

    • @666Tomato666
      @666Tomato666 8 лет назад +4

      +biohazard737 That's because this is the job of a file system, not the disk itself. Hard drivers (both the HDD and SSD type) just present to operating system a single array, with each cell holding a byte of information (I'm simplifying here a bit). This is an abstraction layer that allows file systems then work with any kind of drive, be it containing one or many spinning platers or a Flash memory based one, like SSD.

    • @Killius
      @Killius 8 лет назад +1

      +biohazard737 Basically the file formats get sent into a continuous stream of information which are blocks.
      The filesystem takes cares of reading where the blocks are, what they contain and in what order.
      The kernel then works with the fs(filesystem) to load and get the information in the correct order to be operated on.
      This is basically the physical side of the hard drive system.
      A good example would be the relation of the linux kernel and ext4, Read on that ,It'll answer more than I could in a comment

    • @Killius
      @Killius 8 лет назад

      +666Tomato666 The array is just called a block and there's only so many block types making them work with any hard drive size and hard drive or ssd.

    • @666Tomato666
      @666Tomato666 8 лет назад

      ***** no, the array is the disk
      the blocks are the smallest sizes that the drive can write (usually 512B or 4KiB) and while they influence the alignment of stuff written by file systems, and how much space they "waste", file systems still on the lowest level work with single bytes