Avatar Systems

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Avatar Systems Corporation
Company typePrivate
IndustryComputer storage
Founded1991; 33 years ago (1991) in Milpitas, California, United States
Founders
  • John Bizjak
  • Dan Cautis
DefunctOctober 1998; 25 years ago (1998-10)
FateChapter 7 bankruptcy
Number of employees
140 (1997, peak)[1]

Avatar Systems Corporation, later trading as Avatar Peripherals,[2] was an American computer hardware company based in Milpitas, California, and active from 1991 to 1998. The company focused on the production of 2.5-inch cartridge hard disk drives, initially through computer system builders as an OEM and, later, directly to customers as a vendor.

History[edit]

Avatar Systems was founded in 1991 in Milpitas, California, by John Bizjak and Dan Cautis.[3][1] From the outset, the company was focused on the market for cartridge hard disk drives, such as those sold by SyQuest Technology at the time. Such drives separated the read–write heads from the platters and encapsulated both in their own assemblies. This allowed the platters (which stored the data) to be swapped out for others effortlessly and stored safely in one's pocket.[3] While similar removable media formats, such as floptical disks, were already on the market by the time Avatar was founded, such formats had not seen the exponential improvements to storage density and seek times that traditional Winchester-based drives had been witnessing.[4] Given their prior expertise in the hard drive industry, the founders of Avatar settled on the 2.5-inch form factor as the most viable for their drives.[3]

The company's first hard drive, the Remington ASR-80, had a storage capacity of 85 MB.[5] Each cartridge measured 3 by 2.5 by 0.175 inches (76.2 by 63.5 by 4.4 mm) and contained one platter. Avatar contracted Hoya Electronics for manufacture of the platter, which measured 0.025 inches (0.64 mm) thick and was fabricated out of glass-ceramic coated with a thin magnetic film (1600 oersted). Since drive contamination was a concern, Avatar designed the drives with two-stage filtering and a "purge cycle" on initial spin-up—in which the drive quickly ramps up to 3600 RPM, before slowing down to normal operating RPM—to force any dust out.[6] Avatar provided the drives at first only on an OEM basis, for system builders to resell and rebrand as needed. The company's first two customers in November 1992 were NCR Corporation (then a subsidiary of AT&T), who featured the ASR-80 in several of their high-end workstations, and Dauphin Technology, who used it in their Dauphin 550 laptop, rebranding it as the DynaDrive.[5][4][7] In March 1993, Avatar introduced the Magnum ASR-80M, which combined the earlier ASR-80 with a standard 1.44-MB 3.5-inch floppy drive.[4]

The computing press characterized Avatar's rollout of their drives as "quiet".[4] Despite Thai banks investing $25 million in the company, they had only gained one other customer, Olivetti, by early 1994.[3] Shipments were so slow that in February or March 1994, a sales report tallied the number of drives shipped for the month at 35 units. Despite this, Avatar remained optimistic that they would ship at least 20,000 units by the year's end, with a new, 60,000-square-foot[8] factory in Thailand set to produce 50,000 units per year in 1995.[3] In March 1994, they gained two new customers, Hewlett-Packard and QMS.[9]

However, by mid-1994, successor drives with higher capacities had failed to materialize, while sales had stalled completely. Around May or June 1994, the founders temporarily shut down operations while they looked for new executive talent. In October 1994, they hired Robert Martell, a veteran of Seagate Technology, who promptly laid off 50 of its 90 employees and hired several other ex-Seagate employees to round out the new executive team and develop a new product map. The company spent the majority of 1995 incognito and generated no revenue for the year while building up their next generation of drives.[8] In November 1995, they re-materialized, announcing preliminary licensing deals with Apple, Intergraph, and Acer.[10] In January 1996, they secured their first new design win in two years with Acer, who offered Avatar's new 130-MB removable cartridge hard drive (rebranded as the HARDiskette) on some of their laptop models.[11][8] In May 1996, Avatar inked an agreement with laptop maker Mitsuba to supply them with the same drive.[8] In January 1997 they delivered a 210-MB version of the HARDiskette.[12]

In March 1997, Avatar released the Shark 250, an external removable hard drive system featuring the company's newest 250-MB HARDiskette.[13] The Shark features a two-tone gray case and a motorized eject for the catridge slot.[14] It connects to the computer via a parallel cable and receives power, unusually, via an open PS/2 port; a parallel passthrough came included for using a parallel printer in tandem with the Shark, as well as a PS/2 passthrough to get back the occupied PS/2 port.[2]: 172–173  The company also offered an internal version of the Shark 250, the AR-3210NS, for certain laptops.[2]: 176  The Shark 250 received generally high marks in the computing press for its speediness and ease of use.[13][2] PC Magazine deemed it superior to floptical while slightly slower than SyQuest's EZFlyer system.[2] Windows Magazine praised its sturdy construction but found the potential throughput hampered by the use of a parallel connection.[15] Avatar later offered a PC Card adapter for the Shark 250, allowing laptop users to obtain better transfer speeds.[16] One major design flaw suffered by the Shark, mentioned in its manual, is a catastrophic failure of the head assembly should the drive reader unit be transported with a cartridge installed.[17]

Avatar filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy in October 1998, leaving numerous late adopters of the drive irate that a $50 rebate offered earlier in 1997[18] could not be cashed in.[19][20]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Peterson's Hidden Job Market: 2,000 High-growth Companies That Are Hiring at Four Times the National Average (1998 ed.). Peterson's Guides. 1998. p. 34. ISBN 9781560798347 – via the Internet Archive.
  2. ^ a b c d e Stone, M. David (May 6, 1997). "Avatar Peripherals Inc.: Shark 250/Avatar AR-3210NS". PC Magazine. 16 (9). Ziff-Davis: 172–176 – via Google Books.
  3. ^ a b c d e Nash, Jim (March 28, 1994). "Avatar on crusade to revolutionize hard-disk drives". The Business Journal. 11 (50). American City Business Journals: 1 et seq. – via Gale.
  4. ^ a b c d Strattner, Anthony (March 1993). "Avatar quietly rolls out portable storage breakthrough". Computer Shopper. 13 (3). SX2 Media Labs: 72 – via Gale.
  5. ^ a b Costlow, Terry (November 30, 1992). "NCR to use Avatar's small, removable disk drives: The 2 1/2-inch, 85-Mbyte drives will go into high-end workstations". Electronic Engineering Times (723). UBM LLC: 15 – via Gale.
  6. ^ Gaskin, Robert R. (November 22, 1993). "Computer data storage: The trends and hot products". Electronic Design. 41 (24). Endeavor Business Media: 57 et seq. – via Gale.
  7. ^ Lee, Yvonne (November 2, 1992). "Dauphin adds removable catridge to notebook". InfoWorld. 14 (44). IDG Publications: 32 – via Google Books.
  8. ^ a b c d Hostetler, Michele (May 6, 1996). "Bleak situation turns into a profitable one for Avatar". The Business Journal. 14 (3). American City Business Journals: 6 – via Gale.
  9. ^ Meilach, Dona Z. (March 1994). "Bigger is better (and faster) for large file storage/playback". Computer Pictures. 12 (2). Access Intelligence: S9 – via Gale.
  10. ^ Krause, Reinhardt (November 13, 1995). "Data storage vendors to tout design-ins". Electronic News. 41 (2091). Sage Publications: 1 et seq. – via Gale.
  11. ^ Wright, Maury (January 18, 1996). "High-capacity, removable storage drives shake floppy foundation". EDN. 41 (2). UBM Canon: 41 et seq. – via Gale.
  12. ^ Wright, Maury (January 16, 1997). "The final showdown begins for a floppy replacement". EDN. 42 (1A-2). UBM Canon: 63 et seq. – via Gale.
  13. ^ a b Hamblen, Matt (March 17, 1997). "Avatar launches hard drive targeted at road warriors". Computerworld. 31 (11). IDG Publications: 29 – via Gale.
  14. ^ Johnson, Dave (July 1997). "The Shark 250 cuts its teeth on mass storage". Computer Shopper. 17 (7). SX2 Media Labs: 222 – via Gale.
  15. ^ Forbes, Jim (June 1997). "Lightweight backup to go". Windows Magazine. 8 (6). UBM LLC: 167 – via Gale.
  16. ^ Mueller, Scott (2003). Upgrading and Repairing PCs (14th ed.). Que. p. 683. ISBN 9780789727459 – via Google Books.
  17. ^ Brown, Bruce (February 10, 1998). "Read the Instructions". PC Magazine. 17 (3). Ziff-Davis: 81 – via Google Books.
  18. ^ "Shark price tags dive". Computerworld. 31 (33). IDG Publications: 67. August 18, 1997 – via Gale.
  19. ^ Furger, Roberta (October 1998). "Rebate or Rip-Off?". PC World. 16 (10). IDG Publications: 183 – via Gale.
  20. ^ "Shark Maker Now Chum". Maximum PC. Future Publishing: 36. December 1998 – via Google Books.