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'eSATA' the term itself is not defined or mentioned at all in SATA Revision 2.5 (the specification). Regards, Brian Dees -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Thursday, July 20, 2006 8:37 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Cc: [email protected]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: [t13] What's the difference of eSATA Hard drive and normal SATA-II hard drive? This message is from the T13 list server. Gee, when I looked in the SATA 2.5 spec, it says that 'eSATA' is 'external SATA' . . . Thank You !!! ----------------------------------------------------------------- Jim Hatfield Seagate Technology LLC e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] s-mail: 389 Disc Drive; Longmont, CO 80503 USA voice: 720-684-2120 fax....: 720-684-2711 ========================================== "Wolford, Jeff" <[EMAIL PROTECTED] com> To Sent by: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[email protected]> rg cc No Phone Info Available Subject RE: [t13] What's the difference of eSATA Hard drive and normal 07/20/2006 12:05 SATA-II hard drive? AM This message is from the T13 list server. BTW: I think the original poster really was taking about the WD and Dell eSATA which stands for Enterprise SATA... what can I say, search the Dell and WD websites -:) WRT External SATA: 1) Can't wait until you hot remove the swap file -:) 2) That is why ATA security is totally broke with eSATA 3) That is why we have customers demand that we support disabling all USB ports or they superglue the USB ports for whiteboxes (Google: usb and superglue) Jeff > -----Original Message----- > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On > Behalf Of Hale Landis > Sent: Tuesday, July 18, 2006 5:49 PM > To: [email protected] > Subject: RE: [t13] What's the difference of eSATA Hard drive > and normal SATA-II hard drive? > > This message is from the T13 list server. > > > > Frank Shu said: > > I think I understand. But, how do you address the software license > > issue when you do so since not all software are free of use. > > I guess this depends on how or what the software is licensed > to: a person, a CPU chip, a hard disk, a network MAC address, > etc. If it was licensed to a person then it should not matter > what platform the person runs the s/w on - desktop, notebook, > PDA, cell phone, etc, and it should not matter if the s/w is > moved from one platform to another during the life time of > the license. > > -- > Hale Landis -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] > >
