![]() |
Home
| Calendar
| Mail Lists
| List Archives
| Desktop SIG
| Hardware Hacking SIG
Wiki | Flickr | PicasaWeb | Video | Maps & Directions | Installfests | Keysignings Linux Cafe | Meeting Notes | Linux Links | Bling | About BLU |
Whatever. If you need to have high performance get some real disks. If you're talking low-end system then the partitioning is more painful than the swap issue, I suspect. >Date: Fri, 24 Oct 97 16:13:00 -0000 >From: mikebw at bilow.bilow.uu.ids.net (Mike Bilow) >Subject: Best swap cylinders? >To: discuss at blu.org >Reply-To: mikebw at bilow.bilow.uu.ids.net >X-Mailer: uugate 0.34 (OS/2 2.30) > > > >Rodney Thayer wrote in a message to Mike Bilow: > > RT> with a contemporary motherboard, why not buy a cheapo second > RT> IDE drive and make it the second unit? > >There is no advantage to this. Unlike SCSI, the system is totally hosed when >doing operations involving an IDE device. As a result, the two IDE devices >will simply alternate CPU usage. > >The world runs Windows 95, where the operating system cannot make use of the >free time even if the hardware provides it, so IDE incurs no penalty. For >Linux, NT, OS/2, or any other competent operating system, a far better and >cheaper route to increased performance is to use SCSI. One decent SCSI drive >will outperform two cheap IDE drives. > >-- Mike > > > >
![]() |
|
BLU is a member of BostonUserGroups | |
We also thank MIT for the use of their facilities. |