Fair enough. Back to the topic of the thread, are you saying consumer-level SATA is something you'd recommend for new and intermediate builders? Review the thread I linked above briefly, and if you need more to judge by, search for threads with "SATA" in the title and "mechBgon" as the author. There's plenty :evil:
My feeling after slogging through peoples' owners' manuals with them, is that it is not as transparent as it ought to be. If it were even as simple as just pressing the F6 key for drivers, and selecting "SCSI" in the BIOS as the boot device, that would be great. But there are some boards that are simply ridiculous, like the Abit i865/i875 ones... here's a blurb from one owner who got his going after referring to one of my previous efforts with this
non-rogue chipset:
hi mechBgon
thanks for all your help.
first of all - i've built a few pcs before and never used memtest86 - its great - i'll be using it a lot from now on!
secondly, i found the problem thanks to your other thread. i'm not sure if it made any difference, but i aslo installed all the sata drivers during the windows installation - although i definitely installed an sata disk before on a different box without having to do this (but it wasnt win2003 - so maybe that needs it)
but where i think the main problem was - was in the bios settings - here are the settings that worked for me (this one is without raid - im waiting on a second disk to set up the raid):
note - these are from memory (and from your other thread) - i dont have the box in front of me atm:
Under Integrated Peripherals -> OnChip IDE Device:
IDE Bus Master - Enabled
OnChip Serial ATA - enhanced
OnChip Serial ATA Mode - ide
SATA RAID ROM - Enabled
Advanced BIOS Features:
Hard Disk Boot Priority - 1. Bootable Add-in Device
Bootable Add-in Device - Onboard sata
Boot Other Device - Enabled
Comments? Still think it's as easy as reading a manual? There's a whole heirarchy of settings here that have to be properly arranged to get the board to do what he wants it to do.
My position is that it should be as simple to boot from SATA as it is from PATA, or at least from an add-in SCSI card, no worse than that. Reality is quite different for some folks at the moment.