Good point. On another note, I am wondering why nobody's brought up the command-queuing perf benefits (yet). Is this because sata vs scsi are at

SATAII has similar features.

par here? I'm finding conflicting information on this -- some calling sata's ncq mostly crap, others stating the real-world results are negligible. I'm inclined to believe SCSI's pretty far ahead here but am having trouble finding recent articles on this.

What I find is, a bunch of geeks sit in a room and squabble about a few percentages one way or the other. One side feels very l33t because their white paper looks like the latest swimsuit edition.

Real world specs and real world performance shows that SATAII performs, very, very well. It is kind of like X86. No chip engineer that I know has ever said, X86 is elegant but guess which chip design is conquering all others in the general and enterprise marketplace?

SATAII brute forces itself through some of its performance, for example 16MB write cache on each drive.

Sincerely,

Joshua D. Drake
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