Ata Ribbon
Thanks for visiting our site!
We hope you will find the Ata Ribbon information that you seek.
We welcome you to browse our website and use the search feature if there is something in particular you are looking for.
We"ve included some information on each page for your reading.
Check Ebay for Ata Ribbon products.
![]() |
| Powered by phpBay Pro |
Another great place to shop for Ata Ribbon products is Amazon. They have more than just books! Here are some more information for Ata Ribbon: Investing in a hard drive requires some knowledge on the part of the customer and the installer. There are five basic criteria which define the efficiency and value of hard drives. They are: Rotational speed Rotational speed is one of the main bottlenecks in processing speed. This refers to how fast the disk is spinning in relationship to the heads. It is sometimes referred to as “spindle speed.” Most home computer systems using conventional PATA or SATA interfaces rotate at 7200 RPM. Older drives rotate at 5400 RPM. The fastest commercially available hard drives rotate at 10000 RPM. This is a 30% faster drive than a 7200 RPM drive and retrieves or stores data that much faster. These drives are generally small capacity, however, the are outstanding for operating system files, saving a lot of waiting-time overhead. SCSI drives can have rotational speeds in excess of 20000 RPM. Access time is the characteristic of a hard disk drive to put the read/write heads on top of the data to be transferred. The lower the number in milliseconds, the better. The 4.x millisecond range is good. Massive storage drives in excess of 1.5TB can run access times in the 8.x ms range. Data transfer rate refers to how much data can be retrieved from the hard drive per second. SATA 3.0 is able to take 3GB of contiguous data off the drive per second, double the amount of SATA 1.5. A closely related characteristic of hard drives is how much of that data can be cached for “look-ahead” anticipatory data retrieval. 2MB isn't enough, 16MB is better, and 32MB is much more preferable. Storage is always an issue. The total storage of a device is actually less than the formatted capacity. Up to 10% of the disk space can be “wasted” on formatting tables. The basic rule of thumb for determining the value of storage is to calculate the cost per GB. The lower the ratio, the better. Typically, 10 cents per GB is about average for a 640GB 7200 RPM SATA 3.0 hard drive. The hard drive interface is how the data gets from the on-board disk electronics through a plug to the motherboard or hard drive disk controller. The most common interface on modern machines – made in the last four years or so, is the SATA. This is the Serial ATA data transfer standard and is immediately recognizable by the thin, narrow and flat data cable with only two small connectors. This is the fastest and easiest way to connect the hard drive to a compatible motherboard or hard disk controller. The legacy PATA cables are wide, flat ribbons, typically with three large wide connectors. The SCSI interface is usually only seen on servers or high-end home machines. If the computer has a SCSI set-up for the hard drives, it is beyond the scope of this article. Buying an affordable hard drive is not complicated, however, it is necessary to review the technical specifications of the hard drives being considered to ensure the best value. About the Author Nasreen Haque writes on technology and business. How do I connect a new/additional hard drive to a Mac G5? it is an ULTRA ATA/133 Hard Drive and a powerMac G5... I've got everything in place, but it looks like the wires don't match. The hard drive came with a large ribbon plug while the mac has two separate smaller plugs. I've looked at pictures online and the hard drive matches those that others have taken pictures of when inserting into the drive. But when it gets to the plug in part they just say, "Plug it in." I would but the cords don't match!! Am I Missing something very simple or can it simply not be done? Thanks! The hard drive shown on page 7 is basically the exact drive I have and the cables on page 8 are the ones I'm trying to connect. It seems that it must work if Mac uses it as an example!
Are these the cables you mean? http://images.pcworld.com/howto/graphics/125186-2407p128-7b.jpg If so, that is a serial ata connection and not the parallel ata that your hard drive has. If so, then the hard drive you have won't fit in Evergreen Solar Panels Powering Five-Megawatt Solar Power Plant in Italy Thanks for visiting!
Account limit of 2000 requests per hour exceeded.

Investing in a Hard Drive
Access time
Data Transfer Rate
Data storage size
Interface
This is a picture from the Mac website: http://manuals.info.apple.com/en/PMG5_HD_DIY.pdf
MARLBORO, Mass.--Evergreen Solar, Inc. , a manufacturer of STRING RIBBON™ solar power products with its proprietary, low-cost silicon wafer manufacturing technology, announced today that a five-megawatt power plant in Apulia, Italy, that uses Evergreen Solar panels is now online.

US $5.41