
Hold your horses.Dracon said:Why the heck do you need a SATA? Do you have that much data in your hard drive or do you run a webpage of some kind?
Unless you have like an insane amount of data (1TB) or you are running at webserver or any other type of server at your house. There is no need to get either a SCSI or a SATA drive. It's a HD not a sports car, and the SCSI and SATA are very valuable for the IT industry (no more file servers chugging along) but 10,000 rpm are useless to homeusers.
I'm not arguing that SATA will eventually replace ATA, just like DDR replaced SDRAM, and SDRAM replaced SIM.christiaan said:Hold your horses.
I know you're in IT (and so am I) but I think you should look into this a bit deeper.
SATA drives are just like ATA drives with a somewhat different interface, a slightly higher price (maybe 10% more) and comparable performance. Most SATA drives are mechanically the same as their ATA counterparts and run at 7200rpm.
I agree with you if you are buying a computer off the shelf or a barebones system. However, (and this was two years ago) I was looking at building my own system then and I found a motherboard that could handle upto eight devices at one time. It had four IDE connectors on the Motherboard, and at the time the board only cost $200.fraserhutch said:In systems where you want one DVD drive, one DVD read/write drive, and maybe a IDE zip drive, well, then you are limited to a single IDE drive. This is fine if you can affords to replace you current drive when you exceed its storage requirements, but why other when I can just toss in another scsi drive, partition and mount it? Not to mention, this way, I do not have to sdisturb my current intallation.
Well my 1st pc had a 50MB HD. I had went all out, and gotten the new 3.5" Floppy drive, along with an outrageously fast modem (300Baud).fraserhutch said:........ I have more RAM on the system I am typing on than I had RAM and ALL storage on my first PC.
Oh! No! Here we go again. What is 64-bit going to do for you? All that means is that the processor can read upto 64-bits at one time.fraserhutch said:Anyways, I do believe SATA drives will very quickly become indispensible on top-end systems, IMHO. As will, in time, 64-bit cpus.
fraserhutch said:My $0.02.
LOL! That must be the most expensive free music you'd ever hear. Heck I think it's alot more expensive than music I have paid for.mattamatta said:I have probably 500-1k worth of gear
.... I'm paying for free music for life.... I tend to listen to my own stuff more than anything else.
Dracon said:LOL! That must be the most expensive free music you'd ever hear.
Yeah, but then you'll end up ripping it to MP3 and giving them out to all of your friends, for half the cost and your just violated your own copyrights.noisedude said:![]()
![]()
You could sell it to yourself on CD to recoup your costs
![]()
![]()
![]()