
WD Introduces 6 TB External Hard Drive to Support Increased HD Content Creation by Creative Pros and Mac® Enthusiasts
New My Book® Studio Edition™ II Offers FireWire® Performance and Huge Storage Capacity for Today’s HD Content Productions
IRVINE, Calif., March 17, 2011 /PRNewswire/ — Western Digital® (NYSE: WDC), the world’s leader in external storage solutions, today introduced its My Book® Studio Edition™ II dual-drive storage system with a massive 6 terabytes (TB) of storage to meet the capacity needs of today’s creative pros and Mac® enthusiasts who create, store, edit and archive large HD video and photo files. The new capacity provides users 33 percent more storage than the previous capacity, while maintaining the same footprint.
Combining its extended 6 TB storage capacity and compatibility with Apple® Time Machine®, the new My Book Studio Edition II drive becomes an instant storage solution for a variety of professions including art and design, photography, legal and medical, and a host of other small businesses.
The system offers a quad interface providing maximum performance and flexibility including eSATA and FireWire® 800 when maximum performance is essential, and FireWire 400 and USB 2.0 when system flexibility is most important.
“Thanks to advancements in HD video devices including digital SLR cameras and HD video cameras, the quality and quantity of video content being produced by professionals and enthusiasts alike has grown at an astounding pace,” said Dale Pistilli, vice president of marketing for WD’s branded products group. “The My Book Studio Edition II drive now available with 6 TB of storage provides creative individuals with the expanded storage and bandwidth they need to effectively shoot, edit, and safely store their video productions without the need to compress their videos or reduce the overall quality of them for the sake of available space.”
Extra-fast Performance and RAID Supported Configurations
Fast eSATA or FireWire 800 interfaces, combined with RAID-supported configurations, will yield the speed and responsiveness users need for a variety of tasks including fast, smooth video editing; rendering complex 3D objects or special effects, and saving/transferring enormous blocks of data in a fraction of the time it once took.
Formatted for Mac computers(1), these new storage systems feature:
Massive 6 TB capacity;
Extra-fast performance with four interfaces (FireWire 800/400, eSATA, USB 2.0);
Cool, eco-friendly operation with WD’s drives with WD GreenPower Technology that consume approximately one-third less power than standard dual-drive external storage systems and efficient convection cooling architecture and power-saving mode and designed without a fan to run quietly;
Automatic and continuous backup software;
User serviceability, enabling the user to open the enclosure and replace the drive inside;
Capacity gauge to see at a glance how much space is available on the system; and,
5-year limited warranty.
Pricing and Availability
My Book Studio Edition II dual-drive storage systems are available now at WD’s online store (http://www.wdstore.com/). MSRP for the My Book Studio Edition II 6 TB drive is $US549.99 USD.


















Cameron
Friday, March 18, 2011 at 8:17 AMthunderbolt please?
Peter
Friday, March 18, 2011 at 10:42 AMThat’s a lot of porn
WhiteDemon
Friday, March 18, 2011 at 11:17 AMcurse you Peter, CURSE YOU!!
I wanted to make that call. *petulant face*
DoctorOwl
Friday, March 18, 2011 at 11:16 AMI have 8TB of storage in 4x2TB external drives that now only costs $400 (more about $550 when I bought it a year ago). One of the few problems are the number of USB/power cables plus a hub for wireless access.
I wouldn’t replace it with this because it costs significantly more for less space. I don’t know what they’re thinking. (And no USB 3!)
I’m looking to double my space so I’ll probably be going out and buying a second set of hard drives, but internal ones along with a $200-$300 JBOD array (so there’s one set of cables and I can transport the thing). Once that’s set up, I’ll probably go down the path of ripping the internal drives out of these and buying another JBOD array to stick them into; because consolidated space rules.