LaCie
by Devin Coldewey on September 17, 2009

Look at this drive. It’s nice in its way. It will play DVDs, it’ll write data on ‘em, it’ll even inscribe them with text and graphics if you care to utilize the Lightscribe function. But I can hardly think of a single situation in which something like this would be needed. Can you?

Review: LaCie 1TB Rugged XL external hard drive
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by Devin Coldewey on August 6, 2009

lacie-001
One of LaCie’s most recognizable products, the Rugged line of external HDDs has been around for ages, but only recently expanded into the 3.5″ HDD realm with this 1TB unit. The design is much the same, but obviously it’s significantly larger — and more spacious. But is it worth the premium over other 1TB drives?
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by Nicholas Deleon on July 8, 2009

If money is no issue, and you’re looking to play 1080p content—alt.binaries.hdtv.h264 says hi—on your big screen TV, you really ought to look into getting a proper PC, one with one of those fancy nVidia GPU that you can use to hardware accelerate said Blu-ray rips. That being said, it looks like LaCie just came out with a stand-alone device that should play most of the HD content you “find” online. Oh, it’s called the LaCinema Rugged HD, and LaCie wants $350 for it.

LaCie bridges the multimedia gap with the LaCinema Classic Bridge
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by Peter Ha on June 8, 2009

lacinemaclassic_bridge_with_littledisk

Step back. Western Digital might have a real contender in the LaCie LaCinema Classic Bridge media player and it actually supports 1080p content. The LCB is straightforward and appears to be simple to use. Plug in an external hard drive the Bridge relays all media content to your TV for playback. But this, too, will need some updates if it’s really going to compete with the WD TV.
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by Matt Burns on May 6, 2009

LaCie has a rather nice selection of NAS units to choose from, but the latest should get some attention from Mac users. Both the Big Disk Network (left) and the d2 Network (right) sport the classic LaCie design, which is obviously inspired by H.A.L 9000, and are compatible with Apple’s Time Machine.

by Devin Coldewey on April 15, 2009

LaCie’s orange-and-grey rugged drives have been around for quite some time, but because they used 2.5″ HDDs, they were limited to 500GB. This new XL version is 1TB, and I guarantee you’re going to be seeing bigger ones down the road. I’ve used these things before, and they’re solid.

LaCie intros the CurrenKey: a flash drive destined to be lost
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by Matt Burns on December 1, 2008

Flash drives are easy enough to lose when they actually look like a piece of technology so why even buy LaCie’s CurrenKey ’cause you know its going to get lost anyway. It looks like a coin, for goodness sake. The USB 2.0 drive is even constructed out of metal so it’s going to feel like a coin, too.

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LaCie big boxin’ it with the 5Big RAID NAS
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by Devin Coldewey on October 13, 2008


LaCie, no stranger to the storage game, is putting out a unique-looking and high-capacity RAID network-attached storage box. It’ll hold up to 7.5TB at the moment, which is a huge amount but looks smaller every day as storage capacities skyrocket. I’d say a year ago a terabyte was like “wow, a terabyte?” and now it’s like “yeah, let me get a couple of those.”
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LaCie’s new USB drives are ginormous in storage, gorgeous in looks
by Matt Hickey on March 11, 2008

I’m a fan of minimalist design, and this new pair of LaCie drives are perfect, physically-speaking. They’re pretty dope inside, too: 500GB or 1TB drives running at a cool 7200RPM with USB 2.0 connectivity? Yes, please.

No word on pricing yet, but this is art, people.

LaCie desktop hard disks [via Giz]

Review: Lacie Ethernet Disk Mini with HipServ
19 Comments
by John Biggs on February 21, 2008

Setting up a home storage server has long been fraught with peril. I’ve in fact had a terabyte and a half of storage space lying in NAS blocks in the past year and never stored more than a few movies on any of these devices. There just wasn’t a good, sane way to keep things updated without going through arcane web interfaces or maintaining a network disk connection that — in the end — would always fail.

That said, meet the Lacie Ethernet Disk Mini. It’s not a brand new device but I’m here to talk more about the on-board software than anything else. This is because the HipServ firmware that resides on this particular drive is probably one of the best examples of a home server that could actually be used and installed by anyone who actually lives in a house and does not have a Master’s in Information Systems.

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LaCie Desktop Biometric Hard Drives Provide Storage and Security
by Richard Ozerman on September 7, 2006

Press Release [LaCie via Gadgets Weblog]

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