#Seagate is targeting drones and robots as it looks to add its storage technologies to new devices.
"There's a huge opportunity there," said Patrick Ferguson, a product manager at @Seagate. "I'm really excited about it."
Manufacturers make drones easy to fly, but storage isn't a heavy consideration, Ferguson said.
Robots and drones generate a lot of data, but have limited internal storage to retain all that information. For example, drones with multiple cameras generate a lot of video, but just one CompactFlash or SD card to store all that data may not be enough.
"In a 20 minute flight you're talking hundreds of gigabytes, not tens of gigabytes," Ferguson said.
Data increasingly is being uploaded to the cloud for analysis. Gigabytes of data can't be uploaded to the cloud in real-time when a drone's in flight, so it'll have to sit on the device until it can be extracted and uploaded.
There are other considerations when building storage into drones and robots. These devices could easily get lost, or data could get damaged if a drone goes underwater.
"We're actively looking how do you simplify getting [data] off the device. You don't know that thing's coming back once it's in the air," Ferguson said.
http://www.pcworld.com/article/3088428/seagate-targets-storage-for-drones-and-robots.html
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