haha, u guys are funny. well here it is, I have a Dell Desktop 8400 and it uses SATA for hard disk connections. I have 4 ports and i'm using one right now with a 160GB Hard Drive. My average Read Time is around 45/MBs and i'm also using my onboard Ethernet Gigabit Port. I recently made my bros' PCs Gigabit capable with some cheap NIC's. But i still don't have a router or switch.
And yes being that i don't need wireless anymore could yall recommend a good Switch that handles Gaming packets and throughput and all that good stuff. Switches will give internet sharing right? by just plugging in the cable modem's Ethernet Cord right?
also yeah, i decided i'll get 2 big hard drives near Raptor performance for the price of a 74GB Raptor. But which ones?
Maybe madwand can recommend a switch, if not, then you'll have to do some research on your own to find a god one, I havent done any research on any lately. You COULD look for the one I mentioned before, and google around a bit, and see what people have to say about it, it seems to have good features, but I couldnt say for sure.
HDD wise, well you COULD find as close a match as possible for the one you have now, and run them in RAID 0. They wouldnt give you the hopefull magical 90 MB/s (alot of people think that RAID stripping would double your speed, but it wont), but it would be considerably faster than using one. You COULD also find some older technology drives, like the one I have, and benchmarked for a 'cheap' price, and run those in RIAD 0.
Concerning Seagate, the drives best to get are the Barracuda models, poke around on newegg, read the reviews, then google for a review or three. Last year or so, barring the raptors Maxtor had one of the faster big SATA drives, I dont remmber which one it is, you should however beable to find a review using google. I can tell you what I'd do, Id buy a Seagate, well two of them, at a cost that would allow me to buy two. There are lots of other factors also, speed, warranty, storage size, etc, you'll just have to decide what your priorities are, and make some adjustments in reguards to what you buy. Typicly for me, the tradeoff usualy is comming down in storage size, for a better price, but I have no idea what priorities motivate you outside of speed.
My belief in buying new hardware, is that its always better to do your own research (homework), and trying to stay away from forums, word of mouth, and non well known reviewer pages. Using web sites like, tomshardware.com, anandtech.com, firingsquad.com, to figure out exactly what would make ME personally happiest with the type of hardware I'm wanting to find. Recently I did this to the extreme while looking for a digital camera, and I'll tell you what, I'm very pleased with the product I've purchased.
SO basicly,, for YOU the buyer to be the happiest possible, you're going to have to do alot of homework on whatever it is that you purchase, you know your motives better than anyone else
Good luck
