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10.000 rpm ide drive
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10.000 rpm ide drive
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About time."Be who you are and say what you feel, because those who mind don't matter, and those who matter don't mind." -- Dr. Seuss
"Always do good. It will gratify some and astonish the rest." ~Mark Twain
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Noise?
I'm willing to bet that's a major factor.
It is for me.
- GurmThe Internet - where men are men, women are men, and teenage girls are FBI agents!
I'm the least you could do
If only life were as easy as you
I'm the least you could do, oh yeah
If only life were as easy as you
I would still get screwed
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Wouldn't a 10k rpm IDE drive dig into the scsi sales a bit?
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What about... hmm... ATA166? There is still a year or so to go before SATA for general public.P4 Northwood 1.8GHz@2.7GHz 1.65V Albatron PX845PEV Pro
Running two Dell 2005FPW 20" Widescreen LCD
And of course, Matrox Parhelia | My Matrox histroy: Mill-I, Mill-II, Mystique, G400, Parhelia
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About DAMN time...i've been saying this for years.
Part of the reason I hear that 10K IDE drives weren't out YEARS ago was because "SCSI drives are built better" and can withandle the RPM. Dunno how true that is.
Just when I get my 200G drive, they come out w/ something better. :-)
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Expect it to be lower capacity than existing 7200RPM drives though. They have to make the platters smaller to spin them that fast. I think 10K drives have 2.5" platters and 15K drives are 2.0".Blah blah blah nick blah blah confusion, blah blah blah blah frog.
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WyWyWyWy, SATA should be standard in systems by year end at latest.
Intel is gonna be shipping their chipsets that have integrated support for SATA (no additional controllers required) next quarter and well... god only knows about AMD... last i checked none of the initial run Hammer chipsets were to natively support SATA, and i don't believe many companies had support for native SATA support in their next gen K7 chipsets cause they were due to be phased out. there will probably be K7/Opteron chipsets supporting SATA in Q3 of this year, but that might be a little too optimistic...
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