time
Storage? I am Storage!
What are you on about, Prof? The acoustic specs of IV and V are identical.
Says all.Eugene said:I believe I've seen a spec of 9.4 ms floating around for the 120 GB unit actually, which makes the measurement even more dead-on.
Who cares, time?time said:Just what the hell is Seagate playing at, portraying this as a "new" drive? It has 60GB platters, with a different sector layout to match. That alone would account for the trivial differences in benchmarks when compared to the Barracuda IV. The V can't even match the 120GXP, let alone be mentioned in the same breath as the 180GXP.
According to who? Except maybe for hopeless fish fanatics. The drive to beat, yeah right. 1 year warranty, slower than competition (of the same gen), ungrier on current and probably more expensive too if the past is warrant of the future. It won't necessarily be a bad drive, but the one to beat? Get real. Is your sky green or pink?Prof.Wizard said:I'll be buying the 120GB with the S/ATA (8MB cache) interface. That's the drive to beat... Quiet and performing. 8)
Although I tend to like IBM drives, let's wait for results first. I have my hopes on this drive too, time, but... after the 75GXP everything IBM is so volatile I'm afraid.time said:My point was that the 180GXP surpasses all known rivals in almost every attribute, and matches them in the others. It's been a long time since that happened. Hail to the king.
Time has no time?! :-? :lol:time said:Another time, perhaps.
I'm not sure about the Barracuda V, but the IBM 180GXP's maximal capacity is supposed tobe 180GB, not 200GB. No idea why you saw 200GB hard drive from those manufacturers.James said:I see 200GB IBMs and Barracuda Vs appearing in online stores' pricelists. Does this mean they're available here already?
Now. And there's already been one shipment of 8MB versions. Or so I've been told.LiamC said:But when time? When with the IBM's be available in Aus?