Seagate  GoFlex Satellite: 500GB of WiFi-drive for your iPad
 
 
 
Seagate has  unveiled the GoFlex Satellite, the company’s latest external drive, and the  first from its range to pack a battery and integrated WiFi connectivity. The  Seagate GoFlex Satellite is a 500GB portable HDD, capable of sharing content  either via USB 3.0 (using Seagate’s interchangeable GoFlex connector) or with  its WiFi b/g/n radio to your iPad, iPhone or Android device.

 
Once connected, you can browse movies,  pictures, music and documents stored on the GoFlex Satellite from your iPhone,  iPad, iPod touch, Android smartphone or laptop. Currently Seagate only has an  iOS-specific app, GoFlex Media; Android phones and tablets, and any other  devices, have to access shared media through a web interface. The company tells  us an Android version is in the works, however, and should arrive later in the  summer. Up to three devices can connect simultaneously, either viewing the same  content – so three iPad users can watch a film together in the car – or  accessing different media.

Seagate predicts GoFlex Satellite users will  see five hours of active video streaming out of a full charge, or up to 25hrs  standby. The iOS GoFlex Media app actually caches the video you’re watching on  the device itself, so that the drive can go into standby. There’s some  intelligent content management, too: dump all your videos, photos, music and  documents onto the drive however you want, using the bundled Media Sync app for  Windows or Mac, and it will automatically index them into categories for the app  or web interfaces. The drive is visible to third-party apps, too, so if you have  DivX video you want to watch on your iPad, you’ll be able to play it using VLC  for iOS or an alternative app.
Right now, the biggest issue is that the  drive demands a direct WiFi connection, which means that you can’t, say, hook  your iPad up to it and simultaneously have the tablet connect to your WiFi router or mobile hotspot. However, Seagate is promising a  firmware update in the near future that will allow the GoFlex Satellite to  connect to a WiFi router itself and – since it actually has twin wireless radios  inside – bridge that connection to whatever gadgets are accessing its  storage.
The Seagate GoFlex Satellite will go on sale  in the US in July 2011, priced at $199.99. Global availability should be later  this summer.

Seagate GoFlex Satellite: 500GB of WiFi-drive for your iPad

 

 

Seagate has unveiled the GoFlex Satellite, the company’s latest external drive, and the first from its range to pack a battery and integrated WiFi connectivity. The Seagate GoFlex Satellite is a 500GB portable HDD, capable of sharing content either via USB 3.0 (using Seagate’s interchangeable GoFlex connector) or with its WiFi b/g/n radio to your iPad, iPhone or Android device.

 

Once connected, you can browse movies, pictures, music and documents stored on the GoFlex Satellite from your iPhone, iPad, iPod touch, Android smartphone or laptop. Currently Seagate only has an iOS-specific app, GoFlex Media; Android phones and tablets, and any other devices, have to access shared media through a web interface. The company tells us an Android version is in the works, however, and should arrive later in the summer. Up to three devices can connect simultaneously, either viewing the same content – so three iPad users can watch a film together in the car – or accessing different media.

Seagate predicts GoFlex Satellite users will see five hours of active video streaming out of a full charge, or up to 25hrs standby. The iOS GoFlex Media app actually caches the video you’re watching on the device itself, so that the drive can go into standby. There’s some intelligent content management, too: dump all your videos, photos, music and documents onto the drive however you want, using the bundled Media Sync app for Windows or Mac, and it will automatically index them into categories for the app or web interfaces. The drive is visible to third-party apps, too, so if you have DivX video you want to watch on your iPad, you’ll be able to play it using VLC for iOS or an alternative app.

Right now, the biggest issue is that the drive demands a direct WiFi connection, which means that you can’t, say, hook your iPad up to it and simultaneously have the tablet connect to your WiFi router or mobile hotspot. However, Seagate is promising a firmware update in the near future that will allow the GoFlex Satellite to connect to a WiFi router itself and – since it actually has twin wireless radios inside – bridge that connection to whatever gadgets are accessing its storage.

The Seagate GoFlex Satellite will go on sale in the US in July 2011, priced at $199.99. Global availability should be later this summer.