From
the beginning of the computer era, the storage medium has been
constantly evolving. From the floppy disks to the hard disk, their
capacity has grown exponentially over the last few decades. But with the
ever increasing capacities, new technologies should also be invented to
cope up with the need to transfer large quantities of data as quickly
as possible. This quest has lead to the transformation from Parallel ATA
(also known as IDE) to Serial ATA.
At
first sight, you would not notice the difference between a PATA and a
SATA disk. The main visual difference appears when you connect them to
the motherboard. A PATA disk uses an 80 pin ribbon that is about 3-4
inches wide while the SATA disk uses a 7 pin cable that is less than an
inch wide. This allowed for a cleaner cable arrangement inside the case.
The
differences between the two don’t end there. SATA disks offer a huge
difference in performance when transferring data. Even thhe earliest
version of SATA had a maximum transfer rate of 150MB/sec which is
already ahead of the 133MB/sec transfer rate of the fastest PATA disk.
Later versions of SATA disks can even achieve up to 300MB/sec. And soon,
SATA3 disks would soon be available in the market; offering speeds of
up to 600MB/sec. This alone has cemented the role of the SATA as the
successor of PATA(IDE) disks in the desktop computer.
Aside
from being substantially faster than the older PATA disks, SATA has
features that are not found on the former. The Advanced Host Controller
Interface utilized in SATA disks allows features like Native Command
Queuing (NCQ) that improved the disks speed even more and the ability to
connect a disk to an already running computer; this is called hotplug
or hotswap technology and it isn’t found on the PATA disks. The hotplug
feature of SATA disks also made it practical to allow external SATA
disks to be connected just like Flash drives that utilize the USB port,
turning the SATA disk into a high capacity portable drive. SATA disk can
also be instantly configured into a RAID array if the motherboard
supports it. Something that is not possible with PATA drives unless you
have a specialized RAID card to handle it.
The
shift from parallel to serial has proven to be a very advantageous one.
Parallel disks are now beginning to slowly disappear in the market,
making way for the faster performance and higher capacities of the SATA
disk.
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