"Does anyone know if serial ATA150 requires special hard drives, or will it work with existing ATA100/ATA133 hard drives?"
? From a software point of view SerialATA is completely backwards compatible. As per the spec no new drivers are required (although some manufacturers/developers may include them in shipping products <shrug>). From a hardware stand point you can use ParallelATA (ATA100/133) drives on a SerialATA controller using an adapter.
? Currently the only SerialATA product on the market is the HighPoint RocketRaid 1520 which as you can see in
this picture has HighPoints usual ATA133 RAID controller (HPT372A) and two little Marvell chips however these aren't SerialATA controllers they're SerialATA to Parallel converter chips. So the Highpoint 1520 isn't actually a SerialATA solution it is
currently a ParallelATA solution with SerialATA support***. (This would also apply to the motherboards you're talking about). This also explains why those adapters from HighPoint are so large ... when someone releases a real SATA product the adapters will be small dongles or gender-bender type devices.
? Check here for more info:
RocketRaid 1520 Review
(***See page 5 of the review for information on the PATA-SATA-PATA conversion latency etc...)
? And check this thread for info from last week:
SerialATA Info
"Will this be included on any P4 mobo's?"
? Yes it will be included on all motherboard soon. Starting this fall you'll see motherboards with both SerialATA and ParallelATA, and then it will become mainstread. Also Intel is one of the major backers for SerialATA.
"Anyone know of any ACCURATE time frame for serial ATA arrival?"
? The best answer you're going to get at this point is "this fall". (Unless of course you count HighPoints RocketRaid 1520 which is already available).
" Is serial ATA suppose to render current ATA133 technology obsolete?"
? Yes that is the long term plan.
Thorin