for those of us who aren't up with the latest acronym, what exactly is
PATA and SATA, and should I already know??

On Mon, 29 Mar 2004, Malcolm V wrote:

> Date: Mon, 29 Mar 2004 13:31:15 +1000
> From: Malcolm V <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: [SLUG] Is SATA a viable upgrade for aging Linux workstations?
>
> On Sun, 2004-03-28 at 17:10, Andrew Lau wrote:
> > Hey everyone,
> >
> > I'm stuck at a crossroads right now. My main Athlon 1.2 Ghz workstation
> > with a Promise UDMA5/100 controller is probably on its last legs before
> > retirement (its given me 3 years of loyal service -- looking to squeeze
> > out 2 more). Seeing as it needs a new harddrive anyway, I'm really
> > wondering whether paying an extra $20-$25 per harddrive and an another
> > $70 for a Silicon Image Serial ATA Controller [1] is worth it. LKML
> > posts also seem to give the general impression that overall SATA driver
> > support under Linux is still preliminary.
>
>   My parents wanted a new computer so I used them as guinea pigs for a
> software raided SATA Gentoo install. It had its moments but it is
> running fine now.
>
>   For the best "bang for your buck", I'd recommend sticking with PATA,
> (2 cheap, smaller drives) and software raiding them under Linux. The
> ability to mix and match the raid types per partition is a bonus, and as
> most on-board/cheap raid is actually software raid (with poorly
> supported Linux drivers) the only loss is raid performance in Windows
> (if you're dual-booting).
>
> Cheers,
> Malcolm V.
>
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