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Spec Will Cut External Drive Power Cords

Lucas123 writes "The Serial ATA International Organization just revealed that it is well along the way to finishing a specification that would remove separate power cords to external SATA drives or optical disk drives, allowing them to draw power from the host system. The resulting new cable, being called Power Over eSATA, will be compatible with the existing eSATA connector and support the current maximum interface transfer rate of 3Gb/s. The SATA organization expects the new cables to be released later this year to drive makers."

6 of 167 comments (clear)

  1. Cables by ackthpt · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I wish they'd do something about this piss-poor connectors. I've had a number of them fail and had to junk them because they do not make a good solid connection, nothing prevents vibration from letting them slip.

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    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    1. Re:Cables by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Maybe you are not properly placing your vibrator?

  2. Should have been in the spec from day 1 by krog · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Seriously -- it's two more pins. Why wasn't the spec designed right in the first place?

  3. Re:USB? Firewire? by Solra+Bizna · · Score: 5, Informative

    FireWire is a fairly general-purpose specification, designed so that devices that require a fixed (and quite large) amount of bandwidth can be guaranteed it, and designed with device-to-device communication in mind. Its maximum bandwidth is 400Mbps (unless you count FW800, which I will as soon as I see a device that supports it).

    SATA is a storage-device-oriented specification, designed pretty much so that drives can pump data over it as fast as they can read it, with a centralized paradigm and a much higher peak bandwidth at 1.5Gbps (or 3Gbps, but see the note about FW800 above).

    Using USB for storage devices is perverted and wrong; it's synchronous, so your practical bandwidth is limited by the length of your cable and the response time of the nodes at either side. On the other hand, a design like that is pretty great for things like user input devices, which is one reason nobody ever talks about making FireWire mice.

    So, in summary, SATA is more suitable for disks than FireWire, and USB is dog-slow. Any questions?

    -:sigma.SB

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    WARN
    THERE IS ANOTHER SYSTEM
  4. Re:At least its not Power Over SATA by theRiallatar · · Score: 5, Funny

    You say POSATO, I say POSATA.

  5. Wha-d-ya-mean "power cable?" by DanQuixote · · Score: 5, Interesting


    One of my tech support calls was about 1980, my friend's mom had a computer, and she bought a printer, which she tried to hook up herself, but it wasn't working.

    I went over there and quickly spied the problem... the data cable was connected, but there was no power cable hooked up.

    She quite innocently and logically asked, "why do I need a separate power cable?"

    People don't really give a damn that the power system and the data system are two separate systems. It really is completely reasonable for them to expect a single cable to power as well as communicate.

    These folks shouldn't pat themselves on the back for a "new feature", they should try harder next time to close a bug out in something much less than 30 years!

    This is a basic usability requirement that people persistantly ignore despite the rat's nests of cables running around all their gear. This is certainly one of the biggest reasons for the popularity of USB!

    --
    "We think people rightly feel that once they buy something, it stays bought," --Suw Charman, Open Rights Grp