View Full Version : Serial ATA-II Specifications Approved
Suhit Gupta
04-26-2004, 12:00 PM
<div class='os_post_top_link'><a href='http://www.extremetech.com/article2/0,1558,1571701,00.asp?kc=ETRSS02129TX1K0000532' target='_blank'>http://www.extremetech.com/article2/0,1558,1571701,00.asp?kc=ETRSS02129TX1K0000532</a><br /><br /></div>"The Serial ATA-II Working Group said Tuesday evening that the signaling speed for Serial ATA-II has been set, as well as a cabling specification which will allow companies to define external Serial ATA storage enclosures. According to a spokeswoman for the group, the Working Group has formally approved 3-Gbit/s speeds for Serial ATA-II, the successor to the Serial ATA standard used by today's disk drives. The specification is in the first of two 30-day review periods, during which members can comment on the draft specification before its formal review."<br /><br />As far as I can tell from this article as well as other sources, the increase in transfer speed to 3Gbps will not make a difference to us right now because we are currently limited by the internal hard drive speed, i.e. the speed at which data is read from the platter of the hard drive. The current specs are already faster than that speed. So why would we care about Serial ATA II? "The new specification will provide some important overhead as the disk-to-interface transfer rates improve over time." Flash based drives anyone? :) "In addition, the new cabling specification will also allow for external SATA enclosures, something that the current Serial ATA-I specification does not permit."
Kacey Green
04-26-2004, 01:56 PM
Now i have a reason for my first DMT post, I've been posting at PPCT for some time. I guess I'm shy I watch from a corner untill I feel comfortable talking to the group.
Anway What I'm looking forwart to with SATA II is Native command queing. Where if you ask for bits A> B> C> D scattered throughout the drive, the drives logic would get the packets in whaever order is fastest instead of in the order recieved. so it could go B> D> A >C if necessary or D> B> C> A. This will help even for systems without RAID or Striping.
Crocuta
04-26-2004, 09:05 PM
What I'm looking forwart to with SATA II is Native command queing. Where if you ask for bits A> B> C> D scattered throughout the drive, the drives logic would get the packets in whaever order is fastest instead of in the order recieved. so it could go B> D> A >C if necessary or D> B> C> A. This will help even for systems without RAID or Striping.
Yeah, that's slick! I was reading about that on Tom's Hardware site a few months ago, and it sounds like something that might squeeze some more speed out of our hard drives to make more use of the high-capacity interface in SATA. Once NCQ is here, there might actually be a reason to move to SATA.
http://www.tomshardware.com/storage/20040123/index.html
Kacey Green
04-27-2004, 02:29 AM
Once NCQ is here, there might actually be a reason to move to SATA.
http://www.tomshardware.com/storage/20040123/index.html
WHAT? smaller cables up measuring up to meters in length isn't a good enough reason?
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