Its been time for a while. The whole introduction of SATA has been slow, slow, slow....fostered by uninspiring chipset after unispiring chipset after uninspiring chipsetddrueding said:It's time for motherboards to ship with more than 2 SATA ports.
ddrueding said:It's time for motherboards to ship with more than 2 SATA ports...
Mercutio said:...I'm waiting for the day I don't have to pay penalties in terms of cost and convienence to work with it; it just isn't compelling right now...
Computer Generated Baby said:
Mercutio said:...I'm waiting for the day I don't have to pay penalties in terms of cost and convienence to work with it; it just isn't compelling right now...
That day was a while back. I've been getting current model SATA drives for the same price as P-ATA drives. It's been that way since at least December 2003.
IMHO, that power connector is complete crap. I'd guess that the designers had some idea of a single cable carrying both power and data for a drive, but that concept isn't even on the horizon.Mercutio said:Oh yeah, and I hate the dinky little SATA power connector.
Computer Generated Baby said:That day was a while back. I've been getting current model SATA drives for the same price as P-ATA drives. It's been that way since at least December 2003.
Bozo said:There is one small advantage to the sucky connectors though. I installed a StorCase removable hard drive reciever in a computer. The hard drive carrier was for SATA. To install the hard drive, just lay the hard drive in the bottom and slide it to the rear. The carrier has the female equivalent connector built in. No cables or wires. Kinda like 'plug-n-play'. This arrangement might come in handy for hot swapping hard drives if someone builds a housing for them.
Mercutio said:Philips announces pricing for dual layer burner.
EU$169 (no EU symbol on my keyboard, sorry), which will be around US$200 at current rates. That seems highly reasonable to me.
Mercutio said:Bullshit. I see a 15% price difference for SATA drives vs. PATA counterparts among drives I might consider buying. The Seagate SATA drives might be cheap, but who wants one of those.
time said:IMHO, that power connector is complete crap.
I'd guess that the designers had some idea of a single cable carrying both power and data for a drive, but that concept isn't even on the horizon.
Mercutio said:Gary, I believe I've made my position on Seagate ATA drives clear - they shouldn't bother.
Mercutio said:Seagate "performance" is lousy, and has been for a long, long time. I know it's not the primary concern for Seagate but the last time a Seagate ATA drive had a high position on SR's performance leaderboard was 2000, with the Barracuda ATA III (surpassed 2 weeks later by the Maxtor DM40+). Doesn't it bother you a little that the biggest drive manufacturer can't make a fast ATA drive?
sechs said:I agree. Seagate isn't even making the strong showing that it once had in the noise department. And it doesn't have anything else.
Mercutio said:Seagate is quiet: OK. That's great. But Samsung drives are nearly as quiet, tend to cost less, and the other manufacturers (the ones that aren't WD, anyway) seem to be taking heed. I'm surprised how quiet 7k250s are, for example.
Computer Generated Baby said:As for the Hitachi 7K250 series, I've heard it's pretty quiet, but supposedly 2 times an hour it goes into some sort of maintenance mode that sounds like two park pigeons having sex -- or something like that.
Yeah, look at how quickly the parallel port, floppy drive, and serial ports all disapppeared once there was a better interface around.sechs said:The entrenchment of IDE seems to be much more of a barrier than it should be. Drive manufacturers are showing no sign of abandoning it and motherboards are following suit....
Stereodude said:Yeah, look at how quickly the parallel port, floppy drive, and serial ports all disapppeared once there was a better interface around.sechs said:The entrenchment of IDE seems to be much more of a barrier than it should be. Drive manufacturers are showing no sign of abandoning it and motherboards are following suit....
Stereodude said:Yeah, look at how quickly the parallel port, floppy drive, and serial ports all disapppeared once there was a better interface around.sechs said:The entrenchment of IDE seems to be much more of a barrier than it should be. Drive manufacturers are showing no sign of abandoning it and motherboards are following suit....
Stereodude said:Yeah, look at how quickly the parallel port, floppy drive, and serial ports all disapppeared once there was a better interface around.
Stereodude said:look at how quickly the parallel port, floppy drive, and serial ports all disapppeared once there was a better interface around.
sechs said:Are you expecting serial ATA floppies and USB 2.0 external analog modems?
Tea said:(Except floppy drives: all brands of notebook have abandoned the floppy drive, and appropriately so in my view...
You missed my sarcasm my dear monkey.Tea said:Huh? Only on notebooks, and not even there on the better brands. (Except floppy drives: all brands of notebook have abandoned the floppy drive, and appropriately so in my view. In a desktop a floppy drive costs essentially nothing, causes no problems, and remains a very valuable tool - which is seldom used but a lifesaver when you do need it. In a notebook, where space is ridiculously valuable and parts ridiculously expensive, it is worth putting up with the inconvenience of not having a floppy drive. Serial, PS/2 and parallel ports are a different mater: they take no room to speak of and are more important in a notebook as it has limited expansion and connectivity options even at the best of times.)
I just picked up one of these. 32MB USB drive + travel-sized optical mouse w/retractable cable. Very easy setup; just plug it in & XP detects a USB hub then the HID & Mass Storage Device. And the wheel glows. :lol:Computer Generated Baby said:The USB "Pen Drive" (you know, the little flash memory thingees) have *finally* been the answer to gettting rid of the floppy drive.
Some new motherboards can even boot from a Pen Drive! :aok:Computer Generated Baby said:The USB "Pen Drive" (you know, the little flash memory thingees) have *finally* been the answer to gettting rid of the floppy drive. The Zip Drive 100 was not, in my opinion, even though people back on the *old* Storage Review forums used to try to persuade me otherwise.
Fushigi said:I just picked up one of these...
Stereodude said:Some new motherboards can even boot from a Pen Drive! :aok: