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Serial SCSI Standard Coming Soon

rchatterjee writes "SCSI is very close to joining ATA in leaving a parallel interface design behind in favor of serial one. Serial attached SCSI, as the standard will be known, is expected to be ratified sometime in the second quarter of this year according to this article at Computerworld. Hard drive manufacturers Seagate and Maxtor have already said that they will have drives conforming to the new standard shipping by the end of the year. The new standard will shatter the current SCSI throughput limit of 320 megabit/sec with a starting maximum throughput of 3 gigabit/sec. But before this thread turns into a SCSI fanboy vs. ATA fanboy flame war this other article states that Serial Attached SCSI will be compatible with SATA drives so you can have the best of both worlds."

2 of 328 comments (clear)

  1. Ok, So I've noticed a couple of corrections. by taliver · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If the article meant to say 3GBytes, then how in the world will the PCI *at 64bits and 133MHz, it's 1 GB/sec transfer) bus keep up? Or even RAMBUS memory, which, here says it has a bandwidth of 4.2GB/sec. (So, kinda means you couldn't have more than one SCSI system at a time and get full bandwidth from both.) Now, if you may have to have memory banks for each SCSI component... ick.

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  2. good performance.. but at what price? by thadeusPawlickiROX · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Sure, this definately looks like it could be a great setup: fast, and compatable on multiple systems. But how much will this technology cost? Standard, run of the mill IDE hard drives are about a dollar per Gig. Regular SCSI is a few times higher, especially as drives grow in size. This will be a great advantage if the price range is in the middle of the range, but I doubt that. Now, this won't matter to those with plenty of money to burn on their servers, but would that added price be worth the new types of hard drives? I still don't even see a huge advantage to going Serial ATA right now, so this seemingly good idea could just be another good idea that won't pan out for most users.

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