"With SerialATA you can be reading from one drive while writing to the second on the same channel."
Yes, this is definitely true.
"At 10x my DVDROM hogs 13.8MB/s a little less then half what the top line IDE HDs take right now."
The only time your DVD drive will be above 1x is if you are ripping a DVD or using one of the 3 available data DVD's. How many DVD applications do you own? And I would be willing to wager ripping DVD's isn't a common activity (a few times a week) for most people.
"A 40x CDROM eats up 6MB/s let alone a 52x or 72x."
You only get 40 on the very outside of the disc if you get it at all, also assuming the disc is a full 650MB. My Plextor UW which performs better than spec averages just over 31x which equals under 5MB/s. On the inner most of the disc where there is always data, the rate drops under 3MB/s. This rate will have a minimal impact at most on your HD's peak transfer rate, inspite of the bus only being able to access one at a time.
". Now put a CDR/W in the mix, and any other removable storage...."
And how are you adding these to a channel that already has a HD and a DVD/CD drive on it?
"Look at this from simply a technology stand point."
Serial ATA is no doubt a step ahead of parallel ATA. No one will question this, but it is not exactly the holy grail of storage and even with its new found features (still a year away), it still cannot compete with SCSI from a purely technological standpoint. All Serial ATA does is bring ATA up to the level of SCSI in certain areas.
Yes, this is definitely true.
"At 10x my DVDROM hogs 13.8MB/s a little less then half what the top line IDE HDs take right now."
The only time your DVD drive will be above 1x is if you are ripping a DVD or using one of the 3 available data DVD's. How many DVD applications do you own? And I would be willing to wager ripping DVD's isn't a common activity (a few times a week) for most people.
"A 40x CDROM eats up 6MB/s let alone a 52x or 72x."
You only get 40 on the very outside of the disc if you get it at all, also assuming the disc is a full 650MB. My Plextor UW which performs better than spec averages just over 31x which equals under 5MB/s. On the inner most of the disc where there is always data, the rate drops under 3MB/s. This rate will have a minimal impact at most on your HD's peak transfer rate, inspite of the bus only being able to access one at a time.
". Now put a CDR/W in the mix, and any other removable storage...."
And how are you adding these to a channel that already has a HD and a DVD/CD drive on it?
"Look at this from simply a technology stand point."
Serial ATA is no doubt a step ahead of parallel ATA. No one will question this, but it is not exactly the holy grail of storage and even with its new found features (still a year away), it still cannot compete with SCSI from a purely technological standpoint. All Serial ATA does is bring ATA up to the level of SCSI in certain areas.
