The JoJo
Wannabe Storage Freak
FYI, can be found at xbitlabs, in case you haven't seen it yet.
http://www.xbitlabs.com/articles/storage/display/dual-sata-roundup.html
http://www.xbitlabs.com/articles/storage/display/dual-sata-roundup.html
zx said:Western Digital Raptor 120Gb S-ATA [7200] $198.64
Western Digital Raptor 250Gb S-ATA [7200] $501.28
Raptors? Will the new line of S-ATA drives from WD be called Raptor? Or is it some kind of entreprise 7200 RPM drive with a 5 year warranty?
flagreen said:I see no reason to spend a single penny on changing to SATA drives / adapters at this point.
Mercutio said:I'm confused Jake. Your post seems to indicate that there's such a thing as adequate storage capacity. I've never heard of such a thing. My ~3TB of disk space is just as inadequate as when it was only ~2TB.
$0.65/GB after rebate for the 200GB Maxtor DM+9 I bought a few weeks ago.Mercutio said:I sorta think you're wrong, Tea. Hard disk prices, at least in the USA, are REALLY low. Fire-sale low. Generally under $1/GB for ATA drives, and in some cases only $.80. SATA drives are expensive in comparison but seem more in line with traditional pricing (around $100ish for a decent midrange disk).
Jake the Dog said:lol! I guess I should have prefixed that with "In my land, Lilliput, ..."
is part of that 3TB used for backup?
Fushigi said:$0.65/GB after rebate for the 200GB Maxtor DM+9 I bought a few weeks ago.Mercutio said:I sorta think you're wrong, Tea. Hard disk prices, at least in the USA, are REALLY low. Fire-sale low. Generally under $1/GB for ATA drives, and in some cases only $.80. SATA drives are expensive in comparison but seem more in line with traditional pricing (around $100ish for a decent midrange disk).
In 1989, IIRC, I paid something like $370 for a 20MB Seagate drive, or $18.50/MB. How times have changed...
timwhit said:...I wonder if Maxtor is making any money on the deal?...