ampezzan
Người Nhà MT
Reged: 11/13/02
Posts: 53
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anyone know anything about hard drive? i want to buy a new hard drive for my comp. but i don't know anything about it. I visit circuitcity and kinda want to buy western digital branch, but when i read the review product, i saw it had some kind of problem with Win XP. I'm all confused now. Help me please, i really appreciate it.
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VeCon
Người Nhà MT
  
Reged: 07/16/03
Posts: 183
Loc: Canada
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Hello there : 1 st of all , there are so many brand of hard drives out there , such as western digital .. maxtor ... Plextor .... sea gate ... RAID or SCSI .. each manufacturing had their own spec as 5400 rpm ,, 7200 rpm or up to 10,000 rpm and each hard drive has their own treaming buffet set at 2 or 8 MB ... Now back to your case ,, I don't think western digital having problems with XP window base , ( I am using western digital 160GH , 8 MB buffet and SCSI for swapping) and its run fine on both window base ( XP professional and Win 2003 Server ) Plus my second hard drive running Linux ... They are working fine ,, the only thing you should be aware of is when installing the window ,, Please make sure that you are running partitition such as RAID or SCSI for swapping ) Hope you are please with this share information , by the way , if you having any problem Please share with us
-------------------- Never Put Off till tomorrow What You can do Today
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BienDong
Người Nhà MT
 
Reged: 09/10/02
Posts: 3726
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and then.....xem cái mainboard dđng sài là mới hay cũ, có chạy được HDD đó hay không ?
vd : mua HDD 160GB ----> mang về cho dzô máy chỉ thấy 100GB thôi là buồn 5 phút á 
Mua HDD, chọn hiệu nào cũng được, mắc mắc 1 chút, Đừng rẻ wá, dzô Fry's, MicroCenter, BestBuy mua : 80GB ---> 180GB 7200 rpm 8 MB buffet
Nhiêu đó thôi là đủ chơi rồi, nhiều wá phí tiền, để dành làm cái khác 
BĐ
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Biển Đông - Đẹp trai không đối thủ
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GodSpeeds
Người Nhà MT
  
Reged: 01/08/03
Posts: 1765
Loc: gone with the wind
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buy and brand is ok as long as it has the price you want. i saw at Fry's 200GB Maxtor harddrive only $99 which is good price...
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*Friends cherish each other's hopes, are kind to each other's dreams*
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ampezzan
Người Nhà MT
Reged: 11/13/02
Posts: 53
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thanks alot, i know what i'm gonna buy, but i'm little bit confused with the installation.( e.g., i don't understand RAID or SCSI mean?)
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VeCon
Người Nhà MT
  
Reged: 07/16/03
Posts: 183
Loc: Canada
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This is what RAID and SCSI is just about ( short explainations) 1/ When a system administrator is first asked to provide a reliable, redundant means of protecting critical data on a server, RAID is usually the first term that comes to mind. In fact, RAID is just one part of an overall data availability architecture. RAID, and some of the complimentary storage technologies, are reviewed below. RAID, short for Redundant Array of Inexpensive Disks, is a method whereby information is spread across several disks, using techniques such as disk striping (RAID Level 0) and disk mirroring (RAID level 1) to achieve redundancy, lower latency and/or higher bandwidth for reading and/or writing, and recoverability from hard-disk crashes 2/ SCSI (pronounced SKUH-zee and sometimes colloquially known as "scuzzy"), the Small Computer System Interface, is a set of ANSI standard electronic interfaces that allow personal computers to communicate with peripheral hardware such as disk drives, tape drives, CD-ROM drives, printers, and scanners faster and more flexibly than previous interfaces. Developed at Apple Computer and still used in the Macintosh, the present set of SCSIs are parallel interfaces. SCSI ports continue to be built into many personal computers today and are supported by all major operating systems. In addition to faster data rates, SCSI is more flexible than earlier parallel data transfer interfaces. The latest SCSI standard, Ultra-2 SCSI for a 16-bit bus can transfer data at up to 80 megabytes per second (MBps). SCSI allows up to 7 or 15 devices (depending on the bus width) to be connected to a single SCSI port in daisy-chain fashion. This allows one circuit board or card to accommodate all the peripherals, rather than having a separate card for each device, making it an ideal interface for use with portable and notebook computers. A single host adapter, in the form of a PC Card, can serve as a SCSI interface for a laptop, freeing up the parallel and serial ports for use with an external modem and printer while allowing other devices to be used in addition.
Although not all devices support all levels of SCSI, the evolving SCSI standards are generally backwards-compatible. That is, if you attach an older device to a newer computer with support for a later standard, the older device will work at the older and slower data rate.
The original SCSI, now known as SCSI-1, evolved into SCSI-2, known as "plain SCSI." as it became widely supported. SCSI-3 consists of a set of primary commands and additional specialized command sets to meet the needs of specific device types. The collection of SCSI-3 command sets is used not only for the SCSI-3 parallel interface but for additional parallel and serial protocols, including Fibre Channel, Serial Bus Protocol (used with the IEEE 1394 FireWire physical protocol), and the Serial Storage Protocol (SSP).
A widely implemented SCSI standard is Ultra-2 (sometimes spelled "Ultra2") which uses a 40 MHz clock rate to get maximum data transfer rates up to 80 MBps. It provides a longer possible cabling distance (up to 12 meters) by using low voltage differential (LVD) signaling. Earlier forms of SCSIs use a single wire that ends in a terminator with a ground. Ultra-2 SCSI sends the signal over two wires with the data represented as the difference in voltage between the two wires. This allows support for longer cables. A low voltage differential reduces power requirements and manufacturing costs.
The latest SCSI standard is Ultra-3 (sometimes spelled "Ultra3")which increases the maximum burst rate from 80 Mbps to 160 Mbps by being able to operate at the full clock rate rather than the half-clock rate of Ultra-2. The standard is also sometimes referred to as Ultra160/m. New disk drives supporting Ultra160/m will offer much faster data transfer rates. Ultra160/m also includes cyclical redundancy checking (CRC) for ensuring the integrity of transferred data and domain validation for testing the SCSI network
Ampezzan : This is how RAID and SCSI works into your system ,, anyways... if you are not familiar with those units please do not attempt to install window .. please ask your friends to help you out, and by the ways we are here to share and to help each other, the other hand is we are learning together as a great warm family MucTim.com
-------------------- Never Put Off till tomorrow What You can do Today
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alucard
Người Nhà MT
  
Reged: 04/20/03
Posts: 175
Loc: Chuồng Gà
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To buy a new HDD, you must bring your comp to PC shop for best HDD choice
-------------------- When I need you
Just close my eye and i'm with you...
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alucard
Người Nhà MT
  
Reged: 04/20/03
Posts: 175
Loc: Chuồng Gà
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VeCon ơi, những loại HDD có interface là SCSI-2 hay Ultra-SCSI khó xài lắm, vừa đắt tiền lại khó install nữa, mua các loại HDD ATA thường là đủ xài trong nhà rồi
RAID cũng vậy, những ai cần tốc độ access cao mới dùng đến loại giao tiếp này cho ổ đĩa.
-------------------- When I need you
Just close my eye and i'm with you...
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