HardwareHeaven.com

HardwareHeaven.com

Looking for the skin chooser?
 
 
  • Home

  • Hardware reviews

  • Articles

  • News

  • Tools

  • Gaming at HardwareHeaven

  • Forums

 

Go Back   HardwareHeaven.com > Forums > News > Other Tech News


Other Tech News The latest community based technology news from across the globe. (If you aren't a community newsposter then use the "Submit News" section.)

Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old Jul 23, 2003, 12:18 AM   #1
Dom
DriverHeaven Extreme Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2002
Posts: 12,940
Rep Power: 0
Dom is on a distinguished road

Iomega Samples 1.5-GB DCT Drive

Iomega Corp. said it had begun sampling its 1.5-GByte small-form-factor DCT drive to OEMs, part of a bid to resuscitate the struggling company.

The company's digital-capture technology (DCT) platform is about the size of a half-dollar coin and weighs only 9 grams. Iomega intends to sell the drive to portable device manufacturers as an alternative storage solution.

Iomega's DCT partners include Fuji Photo Film Co., Citizen Watch Co., and Texas Instruments. The company is on schedule to bring DCT products to market by the second quarter of 2004.

DCT's development is a fairly critical one for the company, as sales of the company's mainstay Zip drives have slipped. Iomega only shipped 600,000 Zip drives during the second quarter, down from a million drives a year ago. On July 18, Iomega decided to restructure its business, which will cost the company $20 million to $25 million in one-time charges and the services of 200 employees, which the company will lay off.

Iomega reported second-quarter sales of $100.8 million for the quarter ended June 29, down 33.6 percent or $44.4 million compared with the second quarter of 2002 due to declining Zip product sales. The company recorded net income of $4.4 million, including $4.6 million in research tax credits.

Iomega's DCT will a use a high-density magnetic recording technology capable of areal densities of 6 Gbits per square inch, according to the company. Iomega also has a removable small-form-factor hard disk drive under development, code-named "RRD".

________________________
Source: ExtremeTech
Dom is offline   Reply With Quote


Reply

Thread Tools