Tannin
Storage? I am Storage!
Sob.
I pulled the pin on my glorious collection of early model SCSI drives today.
Seagate Cheetah 1. 4.5GB. 10,033 RPM. The first 10,000 RPM drive ever made. Cost me $2500. Close to six years, 24 x 7, been in my home system, the accounts server, the technical server, and finally banished to the showroom. Never missed a beat.
IBM Ultrastar Z15. 9.1GB. Second 10,000 RPM drive ever made. Worth over $2000 when I bought it, but it was a refurb and I picked it up for just under a grand. Possibly the only drive that's even louder than a Cheetah 1. And runs hotter. It's done five years solid: 24 x 7, never once let me down.
IBM Ultrastar 9ES. 9.1GB. An "entry level" 7200 RPM SCSI drive that, with 170Mbit/sec DTR and 7.5ms seek times blitzed quite a few high-end products in its day. Picked this one up second-hand, ex-government. Would have cost them $800 or so. I've had it for about thee years, maybe four. And of course, it ran 24 x 7.
IBM Ultrastar 9ES. 9.1GB. A twin to the other one. Got it at the same time.
FIC VA-503+. World's best selling motherboard for 9 months straight. The first Super 7 motherboard in the world and - incredibly - the last one to go out of production. Our best selling board for almost 4 years. A true grand master.
AMD K6-III/450+. Greatest business CPU ever made (bar for the 386DX/40, of course). Been running for three years straight, 24 x 7, overclocked to 570MHz with stock cooling. Solid as granite.
All gone.
sigh.
Replaced by a boring new Bliss midi-tower, a Soltek SL-75DRV-5 KT-333 that came in brand new the other day as an RMA replacement, the last 0.13 micron Athlon XP 1700, and a Samsung 40GB 7200 IDE drive worth $138 plus tax.
I know how you feel, Handruin.
Sob.
I pulled the pin on my glorious collection of early model SCSI drives today.
Seagate Cheetah 1. 4.5GB. 10,033 RPM. The first 10,000 RPM drive ever made. Cost me $2500. Close to six years, 24 x 7, been in my home system, the accounts server, the technical server, and finally banished to the showroom. Never missed a beat.
IBM Ultrastar Z15. 9.1GB. Second 10,000 RPM drive ever made. Worth over $2000 when I bought it, but it was a refurb and I picked it up for just under a grand. Possibly the only drive that's even louder than a Cheetah 1. And runs hotter. It's done five years solid: 24 x 7, never once let me down.
IBM Ultrastar 9ES. 9.1GB. An "entry level" 7200 RPM SCSI drive that, with 170Mbit/sec DTR and 7.5ms seek times blitzed quite a few high-end products in its day. Picked this one up second-hand, ex-government. Would have cost them $800 or so. I've had it for about thee years, maybe four. And of course, it ran 24 x 7.
IBM Ultrastar 9ES. 9.1GB. A twin to the other one. Got it at the same time.
FIC VA-503+. World's best selling motherboard for 9 months straight. The first Super 7 motherboard in the world and - incredibly - the last one to go out of production. Our best selling board for almost 4 years. A true grand master.
AMD K6-III/450+. Greatest business CPU ever made (bar for the 386DX/40, of course). Been running for three years straight, 24 x 7, overclocked to 570MHz with stock cooling. Solid as granite.
All gone.
sigh.
Replaced by a boring new Bliss midi-tower, a Soltek SL-75DRV-5 KT-333 that came in brand new the other day as an RMA replacement, the last 0.13 micron Athlon XP 1700, and a Samsung 40GB 7200 IDE drive worth $138 plus tax.
I know how you feel, Handruin.
Sob.