Jezzz...just when you have a handle on the drive and DV hardware something new shakes things up.
I was first alerted to this by John (shake-em-up) Dvoark's column in PC Mag, then some searching turned up more info in The Register and elsewhere.
It seems the ATA interface will be taking a quantum leap in the next year or two. That is when the next version, Serial ATA, is due to hit. The plan is for it to be used with all internal devices, and perhaps for some external ones too. More on that later.
The major players: Intel, Maxtor, IBM, Seagate, Quantum, APT and Dell. They plan to license it freely to other manufacturers.
The setup: a high speed serial bus; no ribbon cables.
The speed: 150 Mb/sec to start with going to 600 Mb/sec later, all the while maintaining OS, software and hardware compatability with current technologies. They state hardware adapters for legacy drives will be available.
The target: Apple's IEEE-1394, although not overtly. Apple has intended their IEEE-1394 will be the next-big-thing in drive interfaces. Since Apple licenses each IEEE-1394 hardware installation its use requires a royalty payment to Apple. The storage manufacturers don't like the idea of Apple getting a piece of their pies.
Speculation: once SATA hits full force what's to stop it from taking over IEE-1394's place as the interface-of-choice for digital video cams? Nothing.
Serial ATA would be both faster and cheaper. Also no royalty would have to be paid to Apple for each cam or card it's used in.
Such a cam would appear to the system as a standard system storage device, which would certainly simplifiy importing and exporting videos.
The proposed map has Serial ATA hitting in 2002.
The Serial ATA groups site is http://www.serialata.com
Dr. Mordrid
[This message has been edited by DrMordrid (edited 25 March 2000).]
I was first alerted to this by John (shake-em-up) Dvoark's column in PC Mag, then some searching turned up more info in The Register and elsewhere.
It seems the ATA interface will be taking a quantum leap in the next year or two. That is when the next version, Serial ATA, is due to hit. The plan is for it to be used with all internal devices, and perhaps for some external ones too. More on that later.
The major players: Intel, Maxtor, IBM, Seagate, Quantum, APT and Dell. They plan to license it freely to other manufacturers.
The setup: a high speed serial bus; no ribbon cables.
The speed: 150 Mb/sec to start with going to 600 Mb/sec later, all the while maintaining OS, software and hardware compatability with current technologies. They state hardware adapters for legacy drives will be available.
The target: Apple's IEEE-1394, although not overtly. Apple has intended their IEEE-1394 will be the next-big-thing in drive interfaces. Since Apple licenses each IEEE-1394 hardware installation its use requires a royalty payment to Apple. The storage manufacturers don't like the idea of Apple getting a piece of their pies.
Speculation: once SATA hits full force what's to stop it from taking over IEE-1394's place as the interface-of-choice for digital video cams? Nothing.
Serial ATA would be both faster and cheaper. Also no royalty would have to be paid to Apple for each cam or card it's used in.
Such a cam would appear to the system as a standard system storage device, which would certainly simplifiy importing and exporting videos.
The proposed map has Serial ATA hitting in 2002.
The Serial ATA groups site is http://www.serialata.com
Dr. Mordrid
[This message has been edited by DrMordrid (edited 25 March 2000).]
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