I've been kicking around this idea a bit, thought I'd post to see what some other thoughts were. With the price of hard drives and Sdram so low, one way to stimulate the market and increase hard drive performance at the same time could be to do something similar to the following:
1 hard drive with 2 40GB platters that were capable of raid 0, giving you 40GB total storage. What I'm thinking of is having the manufacturer build the striping logic into the hard drive at a low enough level that it would be transparent to an Operating System. The drive could ship with a 16MB buffer and be pitched at media mavens or other niches of the computer enthusiast market, say power workstations.
I know that there are going to be many schools of thought on a concept like this, but I think that there would be quite a few adopters. Another thing that makes this technology more appealing is the ATA133 spec, and the upcoming Serial ATA specs that start to surpass current STR's by an appalling measure.
Currently an 80GB hard drive at tcwo.com costs $157. So say this 80/40GB drive costs $189. For $190 you have Raid 0 and only occupy the primary master, leaving you room for your DVD, CD-RW drives and you're a happy ordinary home user who didn't have to mess with a raid card or even OS level Raid settings and/or limitations (like XP home and Windows 9x). If you want more data protection, add another as secondary master and set NT Workstation/Server or 2K/XP Pro to mirror the drives and for only $378 you have 80GB in a Raid 0,1. (10) It would be cheaper to use the 80GB drives available today, but they would not be as flexible.
Closing thoughts; this idea is just to add another option to simplify getting more speed for some people. It's certainly not my thought to tout it as the be all end all, or as a complete replacement to existing technologies. Hope there are some good comments.
1 hard drive with 2 40GB platters that were capable of raid 0, giving you 40GB total storage. What I'm thinking of is having the manufacturer build the striping logic into the hard drive at a low enough level that it would be transparent to an Operating System. The drive could ship with a 16MB buffer and be pitched at media mavens or other niches of the computer enthusiast market, say power workstations.
I know that there are going to be many schools of thought on a concept like this, but I think that there would be quite a few adopters. Another thing that makes this technology more appealing is the ATA133 spec, and the upcoming Serial ATA specs that start to surpass current STR's by an appalling measure.
Currently an 80GB hard drive at tcwo.com costs $157. So say this 80/40GB drive costs $189. For $190 you have Raid 0 and only occupy the primary master, leaving you room for your DVD, CD-RW drives and you're a happy ordinary home user who didn't have to mess with a raid card or even OS level Raid settings and/or limitations (like XP home and Windows 9x). If you want more data protection, add another as secondary master and set NT Workstation/Server or 2K/XP Pro to mirror the drives and for only $378 you have 80GB in a Raid 0,1. (10) It would be cheaper to use the 80GB drives available today, but they would not be as flexible.
Closing thoughts; this idea is just to add another option to simplify getting more speed for some people. It's certainly not my thought to tout it as the be all end all, or as a complete replacement to existing technologies. Hope there are some good comments.