Hi, On Sun, Nov 24, 2002 at 11:45:21PM +0100, Russell Coker wrote: > When you've had a repair-man from the vendor use a hammer to install a CPU you > learn to accept that any hardware can be broken no matter how well it's > installed.
did he also use a chainsaw to cut his finger nails? > Yes. However for bulk IO it's rotational speed multiplied by the number of > sectors per track. A 5400rpm IDE disk with capacity 160G will probably > perform better for bulk IO than a 10,000rpm SCSI disk with capacity 36G for > this reason. The average application for most people is decidedly _not_ to have bulk I/O, but large numbers of very small I/O operations. Like on a news server, a mail server (using maildir), your typical web server etc. Imho the seek times in SCSI drives is faster not only due to rotational speed, but also because of more powerful arm moving motors. > It seems that whenever a vendor gets a reputation for high quality they then > increase the volume, sub-contract the manufacturing to a country where they > can pay the workers $0.10 per hour, and the results are what you would > expect. :( Unfortunately, you are right on target with this one 8-(( Best, --Toni++ -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]