Have you ever heard of smart technology? Do you know what smart technology is? It’s easy to make a guess, and you may be at least partly right. But if you don’t understand the promise of smart technology, this is a good time to brush up on your tech education.
Smart technology is indeed smart, but it’s not about home automation. It’s about business efficiency. That makes leveraging smart technology a smart move for your company.
SMART is actually an acronym. It stands for Self-Monitoring Analysis and Reporting Technology. Smart technology really is smart. Some of the world’s leading hard disk drive manufacturers developed the concept of smart technology in a move to increase the reliability of drives.
What if your PC could predict the future failure of hard disk drives? With smart technology it can. That’s why smart technology has become an industry standard for hard drive manufacturers in today’s market.
Here’s how smart technology works: It actually monitors your hard drive on a continual basis. What’s it looking for? Anything that doesn’t seem to be operating normally.
If the smart technology system finds something awry, it documents the issue and then analyzes the data. Smart technology can even notify you or your system administrator when there is a problem. This is especially valuable in corporate environments where hundreds of PCs are on a network.
More specifically, smart technology monitors your hard drives from top to bottom. It monitors your drive ends, the drive spin-up time, recalibration, CRC errors, faulty sector, drive temperature, distance between the heads and the disk platters, motor and servomechanisms, characteristics of the media and disk performance.
What’s amazing about smart technology is its success rate. Smart technology can detect approximately 70 percent of all hard drive errors.
Smart technology is a great benefit for PC owners because it creates an alert that there is an issue before that issue grows worse. Since smart technology can tip you off to any potential problems, it can save you time and money by avoiding a digital disaster before it happens.