Yes, SATA is a step forward
No, ATA is fine
thks to the mod who created poll
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Yes, SATA is a step forward
No, ATA is fine
thks to the mod who created poll
well, when i was in a lan with a friend of mine, we were getting transfer rates of approx 10.5mB/sec constantly
mostly due to his s-ata drive
i think s-ata is a good performance boost, but not the real answer for the future
no....
What do u mean???Quote:
Originally posted by {I}{K}{E}@17 October 2003 - 03:00
no....
i'd guess he means 'no', but i'm not sure... :rolleyes:Quote:
Originally posted by fr600@16 October 2003 - 21:25
What do u mean???
no, because I'm cheap, possibly if i want to use multiple drives, which i probably won't, so, no, meaning no i will not buy a SATA drive, although smaller cables do sound nice...
same here.Quote:
Originally posted by DarthInsinuate@16 October 2003 - 21:56
no, because I'm cheap, possibly if i want to use multiple drives, which i probably won't, so, no, meaning no i will not buy a SATA drive, although smaller cables do sound nice...
they haven't even saturated the full bandwidth of ATA yet...
just like AGP cards. <_<
I already got a Sata on my mobo.. Just no Sata HD.. :(
they cost quite some also
i have 2 s-ata cables and ports on my mobo.... i just dont have any/know any/need any s-ata hdds...
so whatever lol
DWk
on ur p2 400? - lol.Quote:
Originally posted by DWk@17 October 2003 - 02:58
i have 2 s-ata cables and ports on my mobo.... i just dont have any/know any/need any s-ata hdds...
so whatever lol
DWk
on ur p2 400? - lol. [/b][/quote]Quote:
Originally posted by kurtsl0an+16 October 2003 - 21:07--></div><table border='0' align='center' width='95%' cellpadding='3' cellspacing='1'><tr><td>QUOTE (kurtsl0an @ 16 October 2003 - 21:07)</td></tr><tr><td id='QUOTE'> <!--QuoteBegin-DWk@17 October 2003 - 02:58
i have 2 s-ata cables and ports on my mobo.... i just dont have any/know any/need any s-ata hdds...
so whatever lol
DWk
not cpu.. the motherboard
Well the title and the poll question are not the same.
For my next computer, I say: (http://www.mcbriens.net/liam/img/smilies/yes.gif Yes, SATA is a step forward)Quote:
your Next Computer, Will You Go, SATA for your storage
For my next HD upgrade, I say: (http://www.mcbriens.net/liam/img/smilies/no.gif No, ATA is fine)Quote:
Will you go SATA with your next HD upgrade?
WTF is a SATA ?? a super ata or something ???
serial ata. it's supposed to have better throughput and lower resource-hogging than ata. and the slim cables are a very nice perk.Quote:
Originally posted by neattairoski@17 October 2003 - 02:45
WTF is a SATA ?? a super ata or something ???
i dunno, though. when i first heard about sata, i was really excited about the idea, and it still sounds like a step forward... but early reviews said the increase in HD read/write speed was minimal on single drives, and the improvement was mostly in the area of stripe RAIDs.
have SATA controllers developed to a point yet, that single drives benefit much? if not, i guess i'd wait a while until the benefit extends beyond RAIDs. although i'd really love to get rid of the nasty tangle of IDE ribbon cables in my PC. four hard drives, a CD-RW, a DVD-RW, a SCSI ZIP, a floppy... as you can imagine, it's a mess and i'm just not willing to invest in rounded cables for all of it.
what about SCSI controller cards and SCSI hdds? how much faster were they supposed to be?
not sure how they compare to sata, but much better than ata. like ata, SCSI does make gradual improvements over the years. but for some reason, it's extremely expensive. the cost of manufacturing SCSI components is prolly just a lot higher than ata & sata because it's a hardware-based controller rather than software-based (i.e. the CPU does most of the work in an ata setup). might have something to do with why SCSI is primarily aimed at servers rather than PCs.Quote:
Originally posted by james_bond_rulez@17 October 2003 - 03:23
what about SCSI controller cards and SCSI hdds? how much faster were they supposed to be?
the only reason i have any SCSI in my PC at all is because my old ZIP sucked (used the printer port, it was sooooo slow), so i got a used SCSI one from ebay for like 10 bucks... and a friend was able to "borrow" a SCSI controller for me, from his computer job where they upgraded & replaced their PC/server stuff all the time and they just threw all their old parts in a "junk" room. but building a new SCSI-based PC would just be ridiculous $$$.
on ur p2 400? - lol. [/b][/quote]Quote:
Originally posted by kurtsl0an+17 October 2003 - 03:07--></div><table border='0' align='center' width='95%' cellpadding='3' cellspacing='1'><tr><td>QUOTE (kurtsl0an @ 17 October 2003 - 03:07)</td></tr><tr><td id='QUOTE'> <!--QuoteBegin-DWk@17 October 2003 - 02:58
i have 2 s-ata cables and ports on my mobo.... i just dont have any/know any/need any s-ata hdds...
so whatever lol
DWk
no actually my pc is athlon xp 1800+.....with an msi kt4 ultra mobo....it includes 2 s-ata ports and cables.... read my sig ;)
DWk
Why not? the initial standard is just the beginning like USB 1.0 , the speeds it can do are I think already limited by the hard drive, not by the SATA standard, If i remember well i read somewhere that they've already got the next speed upgrades all planned out, but hard drives will have to get faster first.Quote:
Originally posted by 3rd gen noob@16 October 2003 - 22:00
i think s-ata is a good performance boost, but not the real answer for the future
Invest?Quote:
Originally posted by 3RA1N1AC
it's a mess and i'm just not willing to invest in rounded cables for all of it.
A rounded IDE & Floppy cable set is like, 10-15$ :rolleyes:
How the HELL is this thing 50-50???? SATA is better...its like USB 1.0 and USB 2.0??? I mean cmon SATA IS BETTER! and not more exspensive! like 10 bux! (talking about the 7200 models of course! ....SATA is better..DUH
you did read how much stuff i said i have installed, right? i'd need to buy at least 3 IDE cables and a floppy cable. and they'd need to be long because my drives & IDE connectors are pretty far apart. it starts adding up.
personally, when i've got a spare $40-$50 lying around (once you add up the cost of ordering the cables online even from some of the cheapest places, plus tax since most PC companies are in the same state as me, plus shipping)... the first thought that comes to mind isn't "oh boy, now i can buy rounded cables!" ;)
the performance increase isn't that big...Quote:
Originally posted by bigdawgfoxx@18 October 2003 - 01:16
How the HELL is this thing 50-50???? SATA is better...its like USB 1.0 and USB 2.0??? I mean cmon SATA IS BETTER! and not more exspensive! like 10 bux! (talking about the 7200 models of course! ....SATA is better..DUH
your comparison of usb1.0 and 2.0 is a little far-fetched... :rolleyes:
Yeah 3rd gen you are right its not that big, but still why not go with the latest and fastest stuff? Plus rounded cables for better airflow..if your that concered about airflow lol
so we can save our money for buying the latest, fastest stuff that are actually fasterQuote:
Originally posted by bigdawgfoxx@18 October 2003 - 01:26
but still why not go with the latest and fastest stuff?
I found this site that explains the differences between the Serial ATA and Parallel ATA and compares the speeds.
http://tech-report.com/reviews/2003q1/ata-...ro/index.x?pg=1
The better the airflow, the cooler the components, the better the reliability/longevity of the computer.Quote:
Originally posted by bigdawgfoxx@18 October 2003 - 01:26
if your that concered about airflow lol
I wouldnt buy sata now because its just to early, but it will defenitely increase in performance and then im sure gonna buy it with my next mobo upgrade.
On that site it sais that an ATA hdd is 100Mbs and a S-ATA is 150Mbs. I would buy one but my moboard doesnt support S-ATA.
I wonder if there is like a PCI-to-S-ATA because i know you can get the PCI-to-IDE cards.
Neat, I'm pretty sure that you can buy PCI cards that give you a SATA conector. SATA is better and the future....its like 10 bux more, cmon how can u go with the old stuff
The big thing to watch for is Serial SCSI which will allow everyone to laugh at S/ATA. but for now SATA will do.