Quote: Original post by AnthonyN1974
of course raid has other benifits, i have never stated otherwise. if you read my post again you will find I am quoting only about gaming performance. not many games will benifit from having a raid system when the game is running. sorry but that is fact. because this is about gamimg only what people are looking at are load speeds, yes in game loading too.
since you keep harping on about REDUNDANCY, you can easly get around this on a home pc with just a backup once a week. how much changes on a games pc from week to week, a few save files that are important to the user? maybe a internet site.
as I have said before. all most people will do, when people sayQuote: If you're splurging, you should also look into setting up a RAID. HD access is one of the current biggest performance hits in gaming.
Is slap another hard disk in a pc. "Because the motherboard says it supports raid" and not notice much diffrence.
Only mentioning game performance and not mentioning any other benefit, then stating raid is not worth it, is the equivalent of a one sided argument. In essesence you stated the other benefits are not worth it by the very fact that you didn't mention them.
" because this is about gamimg only what people are looking at are load speeds, yes in game loading too."-
Well, there are two things here. I have a raid 0 setup with two raptor x's, and i can tell a large difference in loads times when they're raided... My guess would be the tests from which you got your stats from are not entirely setup right. Or the load times were bottlenecked in other places than just the drive. That, and you just can't ignore the fact that it assists in performance elsewhere, whether or not they're using that as a benchmark is irrelevant.
"since you keep harping on about REDUNDANCY, you can easly get around this on a home pc with just a backup once a week. how much changes on a games pc from week to week, a few save files that are important to the user? maybe a internet site."-
Well, that is not nearly the same at all. In raid you get a realtime backup, bit for bit, with regular data backups your data will be lagging behind a day, a week...etc (and trust me, there are a lot of files changing all the time). Along with this, if a drive dies in raid, you can still run your computer, not the case with regular data backup where you have to get a new drive, reinstall your os, reinstall your apps, drivers, then restore the data from the backup and continue running.
Now, there is backup exec and acronis. I use acronis at home, its quite nice. Basically it creates an image of your hard drive, bit for bit. If a hard drive dies on a system with no raid, you can simply restore the backup and thats it. The backup in this case restores the os install, all settings, and all data (and stores it all in a compressed format). However, while this is cool, it is still a far cry from the realtime redundancy offered by raid, and depending on the version you go for it at the very least cost as much as a new raid controller (though imo both should be used together).
"Is slap another hard disk in a pc. "Because the motherboard says it supports raid" and not notice much diffrence."
True, some may do this. But honestly, i wouldn't expect that number to be very large. Eitherway, this is a pretty weak point.