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Serial ATA Drives Mature and Get Faster

MojoDog writes "Serial ATA drives are still as scarce as hen's teeth but what models are trickling out from Seagate and Maxtor, are beginning to look promising. This article and performance analysis shows the new DiamondMax Plus 9 SATA Hard Drive putting up some impressive figures in standard SATA 150 and SATA 150 RAID 0 configurations."

59 of 189 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Not that promissing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    Good. you can post the part of an article that refers to part of a previous article, completely irrelevant to the current one.

    For your next trick, try posting comments about Win3.11 when the review of the next Windows appears.

    Also, make sure when Mac OSX Panther comes out that you refer to disappointments with System 7.

  2. Hidden wiring/tidiness by baryon351 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    One of the things I love about SATA is the simple clean wiring, but it's not something I see done very well in most case mods. Anyone seen images or sites related to making a truly minimal case inside? Hidden or extremely tidy floppy, CD, power and drive cables? I'd love to see how others have handled their tidy up jobs.

    1. Re:Hidden wiring/tidiness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny
      I'd love to see how others have handled their tidy up jobs.

      Well, depending on where you're "working" I recommend using a dry tissue to clean up the mess first and then go over the area with a damp tissue afterwards to sanitize the area. You may have repeat these steps in order to clean up the entire mess.

    2. Re:Hidden wiring/tidiness by xyote · · Score: 3, Insightful

      SATA is just a start. There are other things that contribute to the problem. There's the wiring harness on the power supply. That's one mess of spagetti. Also, they still need to get ATAPI supported in SATA so you can get DVD/CDROM off of parallel cables. Case design is also a factor. Apparently, wire and cable routing is not one of the issues addressed in case design. Position and layout of physical components always seems to be the worst possible from a cable layout point of view. You always seem to be taking the long way around, forcing sharp right angle turns in fat cable/wire bundles and competing for too little space to place separate cables along side each other.

    3. Re:Hidden wiring/tidiness by jridley · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I was part owner of a clone building place once. We used to have informal contests to see who could build the neatest PC (using stock case/etc). We would clamp up custom flat cables (this was years ago, before the era of round cables), making them so that each connector was in exactly the right place, and facing the right way. We had what I thought was an innovative little feature; at the time it was almost standard to put in both 3.5 and 5.25" drives; so we put TWO controller connectors in, 1 inch apart, with a twist in between them; if you plugged on in, the 3.5" was A:, if you plugged the other in, the 5.25" was A:. We also clamped on an aux socket for the (then popular) floppy tape backup drive.

      We also did a lot of folding to make things lie flat (we called this "cablegami").

      If a setup had elements that proved easy enough to do, we incorporated them into our standard build. We got to the point where we were making custom cables for most one-off machines (the university's extremely-tightly-bid, low-low margin, 50-identical machines got stock cables).

      Even with the tech of the time, we got it pretty clean and hid a lot of the wires. Of course, we did this partially by running cables UNDER the mainboard. Also there were a lot of cable ties involved. The machines were super clean looking inside, but they were a bitch to upgrade.

      Also, obviously that was something that only worked because we were just 3 guys making machines in a small building; if we had to make 200 machines a day all that innovation never would have happened; we'd have been too busy to screw around with it.

  3. Painful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    what models are trickling out from Seagate and Maxtor, are beginning to look promising.

    The sound you can hear is the echo of the breaking of the hearts of ten thousand grammar nazis.

  4. Seems like they say wait... by 3.5+stripes · · Score: 4, Informative

    As the tech is still pretty new, and could use some tuning. Not too surprising, most new tech seems to follow ths path.

    Does being an early adopter really have much benefit besides bragging rights?

    I was planning on waiting anyhow, this just seems to confirm my original instincts.

    --


    He tried to kill me with a forklift!
    1. Re:Seems like they say wait... by baryon351 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Does being an early adopter really have much benefit besides bragging rights?

      Curiosity. Somewhat like nabbing and installing a beta copy of some software and checking out where it's at. If I had the cash and felt the satisfaction of my own curiosity was worth it, I'd have a few SATA drives running, just for the hell of it.

      It gives some geektypes something to talk about, ponder over, and throw opinions around on where stuff's heading.

      Then yes, there's bragging rights :)

      It's nothing too serious, really. People are people and some of us just like new stuff

    2. Re:Seems like they say wait... by 3.5+stripes · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Beta software I understand, you can always upgrade... and as often as not, it's free.

      Early adopting hardware seems to be a risk, as you're spending money, and you have to be pretty lucky to get it for free.

      If I had the money to burn however....

      --


      He tried to kill me with a forklift!
    3. Re:Seems like they say wait... by Sgs-Cruz · · Score: 2, Funny
      I was planning on waiting anyhow, this just seems to confirm my original instincts. What does not kill me just postpones the inevitable.
      . People, people, people. You have to start checking for conflicts between your sig and your message. I mean, using Serial ATA might shorten the life of your data or something, but it won't kill you!
      --

      Karma: pi (Mostly due to circular reasoning in posts).

  5. More Information by leibnizme · · Score: 5, Informative

    If you want to know more about the Serial ATA technology:

    Cnet

    SATA and ISCSI

    Intel Dev Paper

    Maxtor White Paper

    Serial ATA Working Group

    1. Re:More Information by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Karma whore. But I'll also add T10, the SCSI and Serial-SCSI guys and T13, the ATA and S-ATA guys Draft standards and other documents galore!

  6. Re:Not that promissing... by castroja · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Is that really surprising to you? The Cuda V is slow regardless of interface so of course it's not going to 'showcase' SATA any differently than if the drive is was an ATA100 interface. The improved cabling alone is worth negligable increases in performace for the time being.

  7. Bluetooth Wires! (or no wires) by creamandchives · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This may sound silly, but how cool would it be to have some kind of wireless cabling system for connection between all pc devices (like bluetooth) i know its totaly inpracticle, but u could have one of those cool induction charging matts with a motherboard, hard drive, cdrom, etc just sitting on it with no wires! very trippy 8-)

    1. Re:Bluetooth Wires! (or no wires) by mgv · · Score: 4, Funny

      This may sound silly, but how cool would it be to have some kind of wireless cabling system for connection between all pc devices (like bluetooth) i know its totaly inpracticle, but u could have one of those cool induction charging matts with a motherboard, hard drive, cdrom, etc just sitting on it with no wires! very trippy 8-)

      Until your little sister walks in and picks up the hard drive for your web server to make a good doorstop. :)

      Michael

      --
      There is no cryptographic solution to the problem where the intended receiver and the attacker are the same entity.
  8. The size of future computers... by march · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I once heard that the size of future computers will be limited by their component's connectors.

    That said, I wonder if we will ever get to the point of performance where a drive can sit next to a computer and communicate via a (secure) wireless connection - either RF or IR (or ??).

    Of course, then the above phrase will be that the size of future computers will be limited to their component's antennas.

    Basically, I've *got* to find some way to get rid of the huge clump of cables under my desk!

    1. Re:The size of future computers... by ceeam · · Score: 2, Funny

      Well - if you wish so, you can put your head into microwave right now without waiting for the future to come.

  9. Re:serial ATA rox! by Powercntrl · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Are IDE/S-ATA disks less reliable than SCSI on purpose (marketing) or only because we remember they were and think they still are ?

    Can't say much for SCSI since they're so absurdly expensive per MB that I'd rather take a chance with my data than pay SCSI's going rates... But umm, yea... Modern IDE drives lose data. The most common problem isn't that they crash, it's that they end up with one or more inaccessable sector(s), you run the included recertification utility and it restores your drive to error-free status but it also *fucks up the filesystem in the process.

    End result: Lost data.

    With how often I've seen this happen with current 40GB, 80GB and 120GB drives, I'm beginning to think RAID isn't really a luxury anymore.

    * I couldn't say fscks here, it might get taken in the wrong context.

    --

    ---
    DRM is like antifreeze, to the MPAA/RIAA it's sweet, to the consumers it's poison.
  10. Re:Grrrrr Apple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Yeah, I know how you feel. I purchased a Duron 1100 just last year, and now AMD have brought out the AthlonXP 2100+! They should provide a new motherboard and CPU cheap, as I recently purchased what is now obsolete technology. I mean, its only fair, isn't it?

  11. Re:Grrrrr Apple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    There's probably a PCI card out already, if not there will be soon, so yes the xserve will be able to handle SATA in time if not already.

    What I want to know is why you would expect anyone other than yourself to pay for it?. You obviously wanted xserves, so you got xserves and you paid for xserves. Is there some hidden part of the sale contract that makes you believe you're entitled to cheap future tech?

  12. 'Maturing' offers more promise than 'innovation' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative
    One fact I am compelled to revisit upon reading these press releases of "stronger, faster, better" technology, particularly that which is promised to be coming real soon now, is that virtually all recent advances in industry techniques have been incremental. This is not a claim that there is nothing new to be found in the business; rather, I am inclined to state that if you want to peer into the future all you need to do is apply a bit of chrome to today's offerings.

    Case in point: while stories of (distant future) storage technology consistently fill all the typical industry rags, a very real technique is already available and well-known to insiders. DVDA, one of the newer ideas that has taken off, promises to roughly quadruple conventional hard-medium storage techniques. Although more prone to tolerance faults because the scheme involves replacing the typical single-head approach with four carefully-positioned around the box, the increase in input capability has lead many to believe that consumer demand for DVDA will rise rapidly as it begins to hit the shelves in larger numbers.

    We've all chuckled over the "640K is enough for anybody" quote, but the reverse approach of industry visionaries who predict teraflops of holographic storage or similar pie-in-the-sky schemes is similarly unlikely to lead us to tomorrow's breakthroughs. Don't be fooled into thinking that we've fully exploited the potential of current techniques.

  13. Slightly Off-Topic by epicstruggle · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Now that it looks like HD manuf. are getting SATA drives out the door. Does anyone know when we could expect to see optical drives out too?

    Id love to see the end of all IDE cables in my computer. Im using a small form factor(sff) shuttle, and one of the problems with circulating air is the IDE cable. Also is there any plans/ideas about all the wires coming out of the PSU, as in any way to make those wires thinner and less obstrusive(sp?)

    thanks for any and all responses.
    later,

    --
    "Im drowning here, and you're describing the water!"
    1. Re:Slightly Off-Topic by uspsguy · · Score: 2, Informative

      Given the power requirements of ever faster processors, I think you may see bigger, fatter power supply cables. The physics of wire size / current capacity are pretty well established. Unless room temp superconductors become a cheap reality, plan on a wad to power the MB.

      --
      Profanity - The sign of a small mind trying to express itself.
    2. Re:Slightly Off-Topic by Sarcazmo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      They could start using five 8 guage wires instead of the many small ones :)

      Eliminating the negative voltages that aren't really used anymore for much could help. Most modern implementations of RS-232 cheat and use inverted TTL anyway.

  14. Re:Not that promising... by IanBevan · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The one versus three year warranty is an interesting one. The trend of IDE manufacturers like Maxtor and Western Digital is to offer one year for "normal" IDE drives and three years for "Special Edition" (read: 8MB cache) drives. I'm not sure how this stacks up with SATA drives though.

    Didn't drives used to come with a five year warranty ? Did I just make that up, or am I showing my age ?

    Of course if, like me, you live in New Zealand, none of this makes any difference anyway. Under the consumer protection legislation here the seller of the drive must warrant it for the expected "useful life" of the drive, which is certainly longer than one year.

  15. Why serial ATA? by DrXym · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Out of curiosity, what is the point? Firewire presumably offers comparable performance doesn't it, or is there some compelling reason not to use it such as lower bandwidth or contention issues? And firewire seems to be a standard feature on an increasing number of PCs these days.


    Now, I would welcome any replacement to conventional IDE / ATA which has been the bane of my life. I couldn't count the number of times I've had to screw around swapping cards and drives in order to accomodate that ribbon. I will be happy to see that particular technology go the way of the dodo.

    1. Re:Why serial ATA? by Psiren · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I think the main thing (feel free to correct me anyone) is that SATA is a drop in replacement for Parallel ATA. It should just work, without requiring a whole bunch of new drivers. That's not to say that writing a whole bunch of new drivers wouldn't get more out of the technology, but it's not a requirement in order for it to work. Firewire on the other hand does require special drivers, and it's not yet *that* common on desktop PC's. Also, although I'm not sure of the state of Firewire support in Linux, I would bet anything it's nowhere near as good as the IDE support (which still has its own problems of course).

    2. Re:Why serial ATA? by NomNet · · Score: 5, Informative
      Out of curiosity, what is the point? Firewire presumably offers comparable performance doesn't it, or is there some compelling reason not to use it such as lower bandwidth or contention issues? And firewire seems to be a standard feature on an increasing number of PCs these days.

      Firewire gives a maximum throughput of 400Mb/second (50MB/second), with future versions giving 800Mb/second (100MB/second).
      SeialATA gives a maximum throughput of 150MB/second, with future versions giving 300MB/second and then 600MB/second.
      SerialATA is MUCH faster. Now granted, modern Hard Drives can't get anywhere near 150MB/second, but one day they will :)

    3. Re:Why serial ATA? by samael · · Score: 5, Informative

      Firewire can be connected in a multitude of different ways, to different devices. It therefore needs a fairly complex protocol.

      ATA can be connected in very few ways to only one controller. It therefore has a nice, simple protocol.

      The simpler the protocol, the higher the throughput, because you're not having to send messages and wait for replies to work out where things are going.

    4. Re:Why serial ATA? by ed1park · · Score: 2, Interesting

      This reminds me...

      http://www.tomshardware.com/mobile/20020827/inde x. html

      A review of USB 2.0 and Firewire drives at Tom's site indicates that real world throughput is bottlenecked by the interface to about HALF the theoretical max.

      Why so slow? Is it all overhead? Poor optimization? Should we always assume that real world performance is approx half that of the theoretical max?

    5. Re:Why serial ATA? by DrXym · · Score: 4, Interesting
      I think other responses explained the general reasons that serial ATA might be better than firewire but I thought I'd make one point. The absence of a driver in Linux is not a reason in itself to not adopt a technology. Linux gets a driver when there is a demand and motivation for such a driver. The emergence of snazzy firewire drives, camcorders etc. is exactly such a reason and will fuel development of such features. The same happened when USB first appeared.


      As far as I'm aware IEEE 1394 (firewire) is a readily available standard and assuming specific chipsets are documented there should be no barriers to making Linux talk happily with such devices. I'm no kernel engineer but I would guess that great big chunks of their bus / device abstraction are readily applicable to firewire too.

  16. solid state? by khuber · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I'm still waiting for affordable solid state disks. Magnetic storage seems so crude.

    -Kevin

    1. Re:solid state? by khuber · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Yeah! Damn credit cards!

      Exactly - credit cards have been using the same magnetic strip "technology" since the early 70s.

      Japan and Europe have smart cards in wide use, but the U.S. lags. We still manually input name and address information into disparate point of sales systems for every vendor. That's just sad.

      -Kevin

  17. Re:serial ATA rox! by silas_moeckel · · Score: 2, Interesting

    SCSI is more expensive mostly due to the ammount of QA done on the drives compared to IDE. Now that being said you can find reasonably priced drives on the internet granted nowhere close to the cheapness of IDE. SCSI still wins out due to protocal differences in a system with lots of random disk IO. SATA is nice but is realy still limited to drives built into the case and did they get hotswap built into that spec??? It's one thing to down a workstation to swap out a raid drive it's entirly another thing to shutdown a server to do so. Even with SCSI disks in an 18 month old datacenter the techs are swapping out failed HD's weekly but there are over 1000 servers on site.

    --
    No sir I dont like it.
  18. What about drive failures? by jspectre · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Ok. It's nice to see new technologies getting out there for hooking drives up and making them lickety-split fast. But in the past year or two I've purchased 20something hard drives of various sizes from leading manufacturers and had AT LEAST one drive from each fail, if not two or more. This includes Quantum, IBM (who smartly got out of the business), Segate, Toshiba and others.

    How about someone making a hard drive that isn't going to give up after a year? Or are these guys only in the business to sell me new hard drives after a year? Many are also reducing their warranties from 3 or 5 years to one year. Have they no faith in their own products?

    --

    abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz

    1. Re:What about drive failures? by nmg196 · · Score: 3, Interesting
      How about someone making a hard drive that isn't going to give up after a year?

      I think I have a solution for you - or rather Western Digital do. It's 10,000 RPM, 5.2ms average seek time, SerialATA 150, 1.2 million hours MTBF, and a 5 year warranty! With those stats, it should really fly if they've put some effort into the controller...

      It hasn't been released yet, but I'm going to wait and see what the reviews say before upgrading my machine - it looks good on paper.

      They have a press release here.

      Nick...
    2. Re:What about drive failures? by Surak · · Score: 3, Interesting
      From the article:


      Although clearly this is a high end product, the warranty from Maxtor for this type of drive is lack-luster. Maxtor only warranties the drive for 1 year, while many other high end desktop products, like the WD SE drive, sport 3 year warranties. We would like to urge Maxtor to reconsider upping the anti here. Clearly this is a well built product, there is no reason not to stand behind it for a longer duration
      /blockquote

      The reviewers clearly felt that the Maxtor SATA drive was well-built and that there was no reason that Maxtor SHOULDN'T stand behind it for longer.

      Personally, I think that hard drive manufacturers aren't standing behind their drives for longer for a few reasons. One is that margins are razor thin. You'll be able to pick up an 80GB Maxtor SATA-150 drive for $80-$125, once they begin to ship in quantity. Just a few years ago, the top-of-the-line ATA drives (whatever their size is is irrelevant..I'm talking line positioning here) were selling more than 3 times that price. Inflation has gone up, but technology has deflated in price quickly. (Personally, I'm waiting for them to come free in my box of Lucky Charms(TM). :-P) So if they have to warranty their drives for 3 years, they may not be able to stay in business.

    3. Re:What about drive failures? by toddestan · · Score: 2, Insightful

      1.2 Million hours? Sure, I know some drives do last a long time but 137 years? And I certainly wouldn't put my money on a fast, hot, 10,000RPM drive lasting that long either.

      I would like too see any relatively complex machine last 137 years without repair, even under ideal conditions. Especially something as sensitive as a hard disk.

  19. Toms Hardware by nmg196 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Toms Hardware also has posted a review of this Serial ATA drive.

    Summary: "Extremely High Performance, Excessively Short Warranty Period"

    Nick...

    1. Re:Toms Hardware by amorsen · · Score: 3, Funny
      Summary: "Extremely High Performance, Excessively Short Warranty Period"
      "The light that burns twice as bright lasts half as long, and you have burned so very, very bright, Roy!"
      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
  20. Re:Not that promising... by loraksus · · Score: 4, Interesting

    5 year warranties, sigh. The good old days - actually I just got a 13 GB drive replaced by maxtor - refused to spin up, thankfully the freezer trick worked so I could get the data off it.
    BTW, if anyone wants to explain the physics behind that, that would be really cool.

    --
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  21. Re:serial ATA rox! by kasperd · · Score: 3, Insightful

    SCSI is only slightly more expensive than IDE.

    Typically you pay at least four times as much per GB if you buy SCSI instead of IDE.

    inexpensive SCSI drives.

    Though a massproduced SCSI drive should be possible at prices comparable to an IDE drive of the same size and speed, they are very rare. In fact I never saw one. So I guess a lot of people would be happy if you would tell us where they can be bought.

    --

    Do you care about the security of your wireless mouse?
  22. Re:Not that promising... by dirkdidit · · Score: 4, Funny
    if anyone wants to explain the physics behind that


    Freezer Gnomes. The same ones who make the ice disappear and food get freezer burn. The do wonders with gum in hair as well. Amazing little creatures if you ask me.
  23. Re:Notes from the field...? by KateKarnage · · Score: 4, Informative

    Yes...

    I put a pair of barracuda Vs in my rebuilt (WinXP) PC this weekend, as I was rebuilding anyway, and managed to get hold of a couple. I mainly use my PC for audio recording and editing.

    Currently I have them in a RAID 1 conf as a mirrored data volume on an ASUS A7NX Delux & AthlonXP 2700+ (I do a lot of AV work for my band, and have had a few disks go down in the past 3 years, so I'm sacrificing the potential performance boost of RAID 0 for the piece of mind - I have plently of space anyhow.

    First thoughts - well installation was easy, cable routing and tidying was MUCH easier - the only niggle being the power adapters adding another point of connector failure and more length to already long power cables. This has also allowed me to put my PATA DVD rom and DVD -R drive on seperate IDE channels.

    So far, I haven't run any real benchmarks, apart from 'Well it all feels just as responsive as with PATA 133 drives' :) - I'm not expecting a massive performance increase, as the controller on the motherboard is a bridge to the existing ATA133 Controller IIRC, so although the drives may be communicating at 150, there's a bottleneck there, and anyway.

    Well, I left it doing a 24 hour set of video renders last night (partially as a burn-in test, partially because they needed doing) so I should see later if any major problems have shown up.

    --
    KateKarnage - Goth, Geek, Not all there......
  24. Already? by imaniack · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I bet 99% of computers does not even have one single SATA drive and it's MATURE already? Where are the beta testers, ummm I mean cutting edge users?

  25. Re:serial ATA rox! by xyote · · Score: 2, Funny

    So instead of have to run a separate utility to screw up your filesystem by replacing bad blocks with good ones so there will be no indication that data was lost or corrupted, scsi will corrupt your files for you automatically.

  26. Re:Not that promissing... by NomNet · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Maximum transfer rate yes.. performance? no.. SCSI is much higher perofrmance than IDE os SATA. based on the fact that it is a peer- to peer device instead of a master-dumbslave combination.

    Assuming normal use (ie, non-RAID, one device), then master-slave/peer-to-peer makes no difference to performance, for obvious reasons. The physical discs themselves are the limiter - the interface has nothing to do with it.

    A Drive to drive copy will be much faster with scsi than with IDE or SATA.

    How do you figure that out ?
    If the two physical drives can sustain 50MB/s, then your "drive to drive copy" is never gonna exceed 50MB/s. You've got 133MB/s to spare on the IDE bus, so your pair of drives aren't being limited by the interface (50MB/s read, 50MB/s write, leaves 33MB/s for overheads).

    WRONG!

    Quite.

    I suggest you go and do some research. There certainly are areas where SCSI performs *much* better than IDE, but you don't seem to know about them.

  27. Get SCSI by spanky1 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    No, I'm not trying to start another flamewar. IDE vs SCSI is an old argument. But one thing is certain: SCSI drives are much, much more reliable. They are designed for server use (24x7x365) and can be much faster. Get the Cheetah 15k.3 and you'll never look back!

    Notice: You will pay for SCSI reliability.

    1. Re:Get SCSI by nmg196 · · Score: 4, Funny

      > Get the Cheetah 15k.3 and you'll never look back!

      Warning: Never put Seagate Cheetah drives where there are people. They sound like a circular saw trying to cut though a piece of reinforced concrete. Really not a very nice sound. At all.

      Nick...

  28. Re:'Maturing' offers more promise than 'innovation by Carbonite · · Score: 4, Funny

    ...industry visionaries who predict teraflops of holographic storage...

    Yes, I would have some doubt in visionaries who measure storage in floating point operations per second.

    --
    ich muß mehr Kuhglocke haben
  29. Why was this flaimbate? by diablobynight · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Sounded like an honest question. Yes we have started to test Serial drives, on a couple of the newer motherboards. I own a consulting company and we like to test all hardware before allowing any of out clients to deploy it. So we were running tests on the Seagate Barracuda series, as you well know is about the only drive we could get our hands on. For our motherboard we used a Abit KD7-S RAID. I happen to love Abit, but I have no data to prove this is the best board, I guess it's just a gut feeling. The install went easy, and yes, it freed up a lot of space in the computer, which may be an advantage to dual CPU people who have heat problems in their cases. Maybe in the future they'll make cases around the idea of having the heat output of the hard drive farther from the CPU because of the length available to serial ata. But if your looking for a big performance jump. I am terribly sorry. It is a very nice system, and runs fine, I will say, I had no troubles whatsoever and have added this box to my home network, and use it for encoding my home videos of my sons soccer tapes, 7 years of soccer, 15 games a year= lots and lots of divx encoding time. lol. But seriously, if your a gamer, or for that matter, just a performance computer enthusiast that is still concerned with cost, then get yourself a good ATA133 drive. For the cost of the drives and the larger drive sizes you can buy, I think it isn't worth it to make the jump to Serial ATA yet. But we have found something to use these Serial ATA drives for. I now have a small computer installed into the trunk of my TA and I run serial ATA and power to a mount I installed in my dash, where I now have a place that I can push in a Serial ATA drive to use in my in car DVD/MP3/Fuel control system computer. It's great, I can plug in an 80GB hard drive in my house, transfer all the divx movies, MP3s and whatever else I want for my week of commuting to and from the office, pop the drive out of my case at home, (I made it so I can slide it in/out of the face) and pop the drive in my dash in my car, and watch my divx's on my in dash LCD when I am sitting in high traffic. So this technology certainly has its advantages. even if it really isn't speed yet.

    --
    Anonymous Cowards - Oh God, How I hate you
  30. How quaint. by fbg111 · · Score: 2, Funny

    I'm waiting for quantum optical storage cubes. Solid state seems so crude. ;)

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  31. my understanding of the freezer trick by diablobynight · · Score: 5, Informative

    I believe the freezer trick is designed for drives that are suffering bearing issues. In a lot of drives, their problem is that the bearings have gotten flat spots or other problems and as they heat up because of too much friction, they make it impossible for the drive to spin up. But when you put these drives in thefreezer you constrict the size of the bearings and reduce the temperature of the drive as a whole. It only works for a while, because eventually the bearings expand with heat, and cause too much friction again, and put the drive to a hault.

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    Anonymous Cowards - Oh God, How I hate you
  32. Re:Notes from the field...? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    I was trying to build a Raid-0 system using a 3ware board 8508, 1 Maxtor SATA drive, and 3 bridged PATA drives.

    The stupid 15-pin power cable connector broke and the SATA then melted. Something shorted out or went to 0 volts and the SATA drive went hyper, turned red-hot and melted.

    Because of voltage/current spikes I also lost the 3 PATA drives(they chatter now). I just replaced the power-supply because I think the power supply has been compromised.

    Do not use the SATA power cables if you can, instead try to find a SATA Backplane.
    (http://www.enhance-tech.com/products/ peripherals. html#idefw)

  33. Re:Just one question... by SuiteSisterMary · · Score: 5, Informative

    In the days of yore, when you could send only a few bits per second down a wire, which is serial, it was noticed that you could lump eight wires side by side, send one part of a byte down each wire, and boom, you've got parallel. Like this:

    Serial:
    0
    1
    1
    0
    0
    0
    1
    0
    Parallel:
    001100010

    Now, however, they've noticed that our ability to send bits down a wire is so improved, you're actually wasting time by trying to synchronize between eight separate wires; it's faster to just blitz the 8 bits down one wire.

    Hence, this new ATA is serial, whereas (E)IDE is parallel (those flat ribbon cables give it away nicely, don't they?)

    --
    Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
  34. Quicker than freezing by scatter_gather · · Score: 4, Interesting

    One trick I have used a few times over the years is the wrist twist. When I have a drive that is getting wonky and won't spin up I remove it and hold it in the palm of my hand with the axis of the spindle right about at the base of my palm. Grab the edges of the drive between fingers and thumb and, with a quick twist of the wrist, snap the drive around its spindle axis. It you do it quickly you can sometimes feel or hear the disk assembly move a bit inside.

    This tends to get the drive past whatever dead spot is preventing the spin up - they have rarely failed to come up when I use this trick. Of course when it spins up you then quickly remove all data that has any meaning for you since if it did this once. . .

    No worries about fingers stuck to the frozen drive or about condensation.

    Disclaimer:
    Use this trick in moderation, not responsible for lost data, broken wrists/fingers, or errant "smart" bombs.

  35. About ATA drives by mr_stark · · Score: 4, Informative

    What Does ATA stand for?

    ATA = AT Attachment

    AT = Advanced Technology (as in IBM's first PC)

    Basically the old IDE (Integrated Drive Electronics) and the later UDMA (Ultra Direct Memory Access) drives are parallel ATA devices, that is data is sent over multiple 'lines' Serial ATA send data over 1 'line' but at a much faster rate.

    In theory parallel transmission should be faster, more lines = more bandwidth but in practice serial connections are quicker as they don't suffer from cross talk and other complications (big cables - easily damaged)
    .

    --
    I can't think of anything witty right now
  36. Not much diffrence right now...... by Krizhek · · Score: 2, Interesting

    During a PCWORLD article I read up on the difference between SATA and the PATA. While Serial was able to do better on searching and moving a bunch of smaller files. Parallel was still able to beat Serial in opening a single 1.7 gig file. And the difference in some cases was only by a few seconds. This, to me, doesn't want to make me change anytime soon. I don't see this coming into play for a few more years when they are able to make the transfer's faster for big files or they just decide to change it anyway and leave us in the dust..... Like dell and how they are getting rid of A drives.

  37. Parallel ATA legacy connectors by xyote · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Given the mobo manufacturers' tendency to leave legacy connectors on long after the need for them has all but disappeared, i.e. parallel & serial connectors, I suppose we'll still see PATA connectors on the mobo's for years.