Loyal employee that [Paul] Engel was... - Tim Jackson, Inside Intel page 130
JOINING LACIE'S fleet of 400GB (7200 RPM) and 500GB versions is the new portable Little Big Disk. This mobile device is based around two 2.5-inch hard disks working in unison on a RAID 0 format. It offers 110MB/s burst transfer rates over eSATA or up to 80MB/s using FireWire 800.
The glory-holes accompanying the device are an eSATA 3Gbits, two Firewire 800 with a Firewire 400 adaptor and a USB 2.0 interface. It can also be daisy-chained with other Lacie hard disks or DVD±RW drives, using one of the two Firewire interfaces. All of which hits the sweet-spots needed by today’s external storage devices, hurrah!
Little Big Disk Quadra 1TB
Little Big Disk is entirely fanless, instead it's using Neil Poulton’s d2 heat-sink allowing it to operate quietly without sounding likea commercial airline jet taking off inside a cupboard. Weighing in at just over 1.4 pounds, it’s still up to 60 per cent lighter than the conventional desktop drives.
“The Little Big Disk is suitable for multiple in-the-field applications. A professional photographer will take thousands of RAW photos in one photo shoot, while a videographer needs tremendous capacity and transfer rates to edit their footage,” bragged Arnaud Prezelin, Lacie Product Manager for Creative Pro solutions.
It’s fully plug and pray enabled for those-who-shall-not-be-named and their Mac Cat themed OS along with Windows Vista for dual compatibility. Little Big Disk Quadra arrives preloaded with the Lacie Setup Assistant software for optimising the device according to your needs – whether this be Dirty-Mac, Windows or even a cross-platform environment.
The 1TB LaCie Little Big Disk Quadra is around now from Lacie directly and widely available through specialised dealers at the suggested retail price starting at £400.
Palming off a terabyte has never been easier. µ
Marketing. Brought to you by The Inq.
..also punch and pie.

No seriously, where's the news here?
I wonder if the guys at Silent PC Review.com would think of this.
The big question is, can it be reconfigured to raid 1? carrying that much data on a portable single point of failure is bad enough, splitting that data across 2 points of failure in one pretty little box is utter stupidity....
And this is supposed to be a small unit ??

Looks pretty non pocket friendly by that image atleast...
Bought a 1TB LaCie Ethernet Big Disk in Decemeber 2007. It lasted four months and stopped working, what a piece of rubbish. It seems this is not uncommon with big LaCie drives (USB and NAS).

Fortuately I had a backup, otherwise I would have lost a lot of valuable data. Got a Maxtor now. It's more advanced, much quieter, works faster (with gigabit ethernet), excellent build quality and a similar price point.
How does this give any benefit over buying my own hard drive enclosure + 1TB storage for £150 at most? Or even an enclosure for two disk RAID + disks will not surpass £250??

Inquiring minds want to know.
Wel... that's nice!
But what about the maintenance of this storage device? How about its warranties?