Yeah I agree with Comptia_Rep in that SCSI as in parallel SCSI is dying, but not Serial Attached SCSI (SAS). This quite naturally mirrors desktop users dropping PATA for SATA, and quite understandably this has taken more time for enterprise-grade hardware because they'd only jump ship once everything was ironed out (so they got a chance to learn from SATA1 mistakes, shortcomings, and so on, whilst adding their own functions too). Also an important thing to note is that SCSI/SAS drives are fast moving to the 2.5" form factor. Since these drives don't generally need huge capacities, the 2.5" size is now feasible because of advances in data density, whilst taking up way less space, generating less heat, and drawing less energy. The key really being taking up less space though, since that means a server/server room/datacenter/whatever can have way more drives. They don't perform quite as well as the 3.5"s naturally, but they are if anything more suited towards their intended use. The 3.5"s are somewhat like the Concorde at this point - the king of speed, but not cost effective.
As for raided Raptors beating raided SCSI for enterprise/server applications, I certainly don't know first-hand, because I just don't have an environment to test them myself. But everything I've read and seen first-hand suggests that they win only in the desktop environment. Firmware, firmware, firmware. If one of these companies caught on that there is enthusiast demand and made a SCSI drive with the right firmware, it would naturally be able to beat the Raptor (although it's questionable by how much, since the new 1TB Hitachi 7200rpm gives the Raptor a run for its money as it is - meaning seek times just don't play such a big role in desktops).
Ethel - yeah I searched and searched on ebay till a drive came along for cheap, which only happened about 5 days ago, with me painfully watching hundreds of items till that point heh! I ended up getting a MAX3036, for 20.50 pounds (about 41USD) with delivery, but I've only just sent the cheque to the guy since he doesn't take PayPal, so will have to wait till it clears and I get the drive! All the MAUs and Atlas IIs that I was watching ended up going for at least 100USD, which was more than I was prepared to spend! The 36GB drive is perfect since I don't need any more space for just my OS.