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This hard drive will self-destruct in five ...

This hard drive will self-destruct in five ...

By:  Lucas Mearian  On: 17 May 2012 For: ComputerWorld (US) Creator
 

The RunCore Invincible will overwrite your data at the push of a button -- or fry your hard drive with an electrical pulse. WITH FLAMING VIDEO

Shades of Mission Impossible.

RunCore, a Chinese maker of solid state drives (SSDs), has unveiled a drive that with the push of a button self-destructs, wiping your data from the NAND flash chips inside.

The new InVincible is an internal 2.5-in SATA SSD that comes with the option of either consumer-grade, multi-level cell (MLC) flash or data-center-grade single-level cell (SLC) flash memory. The drive is also capable of operating at temperatures ranging from 95 degrees to minus 45 degree Celsius, the company said.

What really sets the drive apart, however, is its unique self-destruct feature.

The SSD ships with a separate cable that has a SATA interconnect on one end and two buttons, red and green, on the other. When a user presses the green button, it activates a feature that overwrites all data on the SSD with meaningless code. That resets the SSD, allowing it to be reused.

When the red button is pressed, the drive is destroyed through the use of an electrical surge that literally fries the NAND flash chips inside.
 
Watch the video demo here

"The RunCore InVincible product series is catering to embedded computer systems requiring high-speed serial switched fabric interconnects for rugged design implementation and more flexible power ranges, delivering optimized storage options -- particularly in mission-critical fields such aerospace, military and general industrial applications," the company said in a statement.

The drive sports rather average SSD performance of 240MB/sec for sequential reads and 140MB/sec for writes.

The company declined to name a price for the drive.

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lucas mearian Lucas Mearian is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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