Notebook Hard Drive Roundup 122
Sivar writes "With the increasing popularity of notebooks and their growing use in gaming and workstation-like tasks, it is important to consider the performance of more than just the CPU and video. Storagereview.com has a roundup of notebook hard drives which includes their new gaming and office tests, server performance graphs for those so inclined, and finally power usage and noise numbers which are particularly important for laptop hardware."
Laptops really for gaming? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:4, Interesting)
In addition, with console game systems becoming a more credible place to play first person shooters (see nintendo revolution's controller, eh?) I may not have any reason to play any non-strategy PC games. Those games [generally] need CPU more than graphics, so that should be fine.
Mostly, I don't have time to play PC games any more. Console games are usually broken up into smaller, more convenient pieces. Granted, you can usually save anywhere in a PC game, but it can be disorienting coming back in the middle of a mission. I believe the move towards laptops can also be seen as a move away from sitting on your ass in front of a big heavy display for long periods of time - people making that move probably aren't playing many PC games anyway.
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:1)
With Windows, I saw improvement by turning off ClearType for flatpanels, and other
XP display options. Running benchmarks with the AC power connected helps as well.
The worst part with new laptops is you can't drop to full screen 800x600 to run faster.
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:1)
This isn't really true.
I use a Dell D810 for gaming. This is configured with an ATI X600. This certainly isn't the fastest card around, but it's perfectly playable with current games.
The native screen resolution is 1920x1200, which is a little high for some games. However, the ATI graphics chip has configuration options for how to scale the image. It's perfectly fine running games full screen at a lower resolution than th
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:2)
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:3, Informative)
I tried out Farcry on it. It played FINE (granted, not on the highest detail settings). I sat in the passenger seat of a car and played with a trackball.
Later, I tried City of Villains on it. It played fine.
This thing isn't even a "gaming" laptop. An X600 is modest, not exceptional, graphics hardware, but it's good enough for something as modern as Farcry.
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:2)
www.sagernotebook.com
Do you like Far Cry?
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:1)
Did you buy this option?
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:2)
I've never quite been able to trust their products, truth be told.
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:1)
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:1)
I myself use a Sager NP9860 as my main workstation. It's simply the highes
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:2)
The 7200rpm drive is significantly faster on boot. Last I timed, I think it was close to 20 seconds faster than the 4.2k. Applications jump up when launched, and gnome panel menus draw almost instantly when first opened as oppos
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:2)
My other notebook, a 1GB 1.6GHz Pentium M Thinkpad T40 with an 80GB, 7200rpm Hitachi drive in it, actually starts Server 2003 Web edition about 12 seconds slower.
Yes, some apps start faster on the Thinkpad. Others, there's no perceptible difference, and t
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:1)
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:2)
It made one hell of a difference.
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:3, Interesting)
For a lot of college kids these days, the laptop is their only computer. If a game doesn't run on a laptop, they don't play it. They are more likely to own a handheld console than a desktop PC.
As far as I can tell, Quake III and City of Heroes were made strictly for the VH-1 demographic (and their children.) Young adults are mostly giving the PC game scene a pass.
The one exception seems to be World of Warcra
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:2)
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:2, Interesting)
The desktop has been relegated to filesharing and being used by the wife.
Yes, it's becoming more popular.
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:1)
I'm waiting on the intel procesors on macs to get her one!
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:2)
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:2, Insightful)
For me, though, the laptop isn't a gaming platform. It'll run Unreal Tournament II decently, but Enemy Territory runs at maybe 20fps max (10fps average). Yeah, it's not high-powered...it's also not too upgradeable. Definitely not as tweakable as a good ol' desktop. If by "gaming" you mea
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:2, Informative)
Power consumption isn't much of a factor...when you're doing anything that requires special attention (ie work or gaming), you'll likely be stationed somewhere and plugged in. Some of the 12lb monsters that Sager puts out pretty much assume you'll be using the thing at a desk. As for monitors, there are models w
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:2)
Hmmm. Really, the same Enemy Territory that I can play fine on my Matrox G550 (which has very little 3d acceleration to speak of...)?
Admittedly I'm playing with almost all details set to "low" (which has some advantages btw, for example I can sometimes see enemy players shine through walls
The performance with these settings is good enough for a
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:2)
Admittedly there is one map (the one with the rain, don't recall the name) that cause noticable lag. But it's only that one map and it's still playable. I assume that on in that map it would go down to around 20fps in certain situati
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:3, Interesting)
It depends on what you consider serious. I use my laptop to play stuff like EQ2, Civ 4 and Evil Genius but when it comes to FPSs I'm still a desktop devotee; for one reason it's cheaper and another is that I normally don't use my laptop on a desk, so in the matter of keyboard/mouse play the desktop is more natural to me.
Could I use my laptop to play HL2? Sure, but my performance would suffer simply because of layout over computing power.
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:1)
I have personally just hit the threshold where I'm prepared to give up my desktop gaming for the convenience of a laptop - I just purchased a Dell XPS M170 [cnet.com] which includes a GeForce 7800 Go. It benchmarks at 87fps on Doom 3, high quality, 1024x768, 4xAA, which is on par with higher end desktops.
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:2)
To me it makes a bit more sense. It's easier to snap a gameboy out at an airport or on a plane, the batteries last longer and frankly nothing beats a good match of some mid-90s GB game with ridiculous plotlines and often hard to decipher graphics [that said I'm a FF2 addict
Tom
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:3, Insightful)
I used my laptop (Eurocom D500P, basically a branded Clevo) for gaming for quite a while. It had a mobile ATI 9600 Pro, 1 GB of RAM, 60 GB HD, and was a very reasonable gaming machine. Still is, but it can't handle some of what I play, notably Everquest, and that is mostly due to the game's horrible graphics engine.
Games like q3 arena, BF1942, Steam and all of its bits, and even Battlefield 2, Doom 3, Quake 4 run pretty decently with appropriate settings levels. This would probably go for
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:2)
So, your standard, middle of the road laptop runs most modern games just fine these days. You don't have to blow $3k on a "Gaming" laptop, as long as you don't mind playing at less-than-max settings, wi
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:1)
My Sharp RD-10 is about 2 years old (at the time it was high-end) and still plays everything I throw at it. I don't do really "serious" gaming on any platform, but when I see a new FPS or strategy game that I'd like to give a spin, I haven't really ever run into a problem. It's got a P4, 2.8 GHz desktop CPU, a GeForce 420 Go, 512 MB ram and on-board mini-pci wireless so really still not too bad by modern specs. While the battery life isn't anything to brag about, it has no problem doing what I
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:2)
Yes. I believe that Notebook sales already have surpassed desktops PC's in many countries. In a not so distant future, notebook computers will constitute the wast majority of computers in peoples home.
Besides, even desktop PC's will soon use 2.5" "notebook" hard discs, instead of 3.5" discs. Of course there will be a transition period, but PC hardware will continue to shrink in size. (full height 5.25" SCSI drives, oh w
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:1)
They should have tested the 100GB version of the Hitachi Travelstar 5K100 instead of the 80GB. I paid under $150 for it in September (after my original 4200 rpm 60GB HDD died) and it is a little faster than the 80GB version that a friend has in his laptop.
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:1)
I don't see them either, but that's probably due to natural selection, for those who try probably their laptop gets nicked before long.
(Those who don't try get a better chance of maintaining ownership)
MSI-1036 17" Turion 256MB X700 laptop (Score:2)
Throw in an AMD Turion MT40 (2.2GHz, 25W) CPU (see ewiz.com), 2GB RAM (Crucial PC3200, ~$240), that Hitachi 100GB 7200RPM HD (see zipzoomfly.com), along with the stock 17" widescreen and 256MB Radeon X700 GPU and you'll have a seriously nice gaming notebook.
If you want something really outrageous, the Clevo D900K [amdboard.com] notebooks take Athlon 64 X2 dualcore CPUs and GeForce 7800
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:2)
I don't use laptops for gaming, based on person experience. I'm a college student who uses a desktop at school and the family laptop at home. I recently got addicted to World of Warcrack, and I really needed a fix while I was home for Thanksgiving. Remember, World of Warcraft isn't an extremely demanding game compared to some of the FPS titles out there, but it ran sluggishly at times on my family's new laptop. We're ta
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:1)
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:1)
Of course I'd rather have a desktop, just to be more upgradable but having a laptop that can do most of what I want is the best of both worlds.
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:3, Informative)
My other 'desktop' computers are used as servers or for work-only (aka workstations).
There are quite a few valid reasons for using a laptop for gaming. For one, I like to be able to sit on my bed or sofa and play Battlefield 2 without any lag via 802.11g and a logitech wireless mouse. I like to be able to bring my laptop easily to my friends' houses or to LAN partys without having to worry about alot of cables or weight (though my laptop is pretty heavy). I like to be able
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:2)
There's some guy in my government class that always brings his obviously-for-gaming laptop to class to take notes on. This thing has got to be over 12 pounds, and the fan gets so loud that I can't concentrate on the lecture. I want to shove that laptop up his urethra.
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:1)
I use mine (Score:2)
For games such as Half Life 2 and BattleField (1942, I don't own BF2 yet) it ran just fine. Today's laptops really aren't like the laptops of old... there are definately some that more qualify as mobile desktops.
Re:Laptops really for gaming? (Score:2)
I use my laptop for gaming because it has a faster processor and video card than my desktop system. I hook the lappy up to my CRT monitor, use a fullsize keyboard, and mouse. Now, I'm not a hardcore gamer by any means, but this way I can bring my laptop over to my friends place so we can play games wirelessly. It's a lot easier to grab my laptop to go play a few games than it is to haul my PC/CRT. I'm also a sysadmin, so I need my laptop
Toshiba missing (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Toshiba missing (Score:2)
Re:Toshiba missing (Score:1)
Re:Toshiba missing (Score:2)
Hard Drive Speed? (Score:1)
It's too bad... (Score:4, Interesting)
And what really sucks is... (Score:2)
The solution: (Score:1)
Along
Re:And what really sucks is... (Score:2)
I don't think I'll ever use a 3.5" drive in my desktop again, those are good for the "home-server" in the other
Re:It's too bad... (Score:2)
I know that Apple isn't "most of the time" but if you're buying an Apple it's "all the time" ;-) I opted for the 7200rpm 100GB drive and after reading this article I'm glad I did.
Re:It's too bad... (Score:2)
Check Toshiba, Sony, Eurocom, Dell, etc.
The best notebook harddrive? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The best notebook harddrive? (Score:2)
It really makes me question the use of a laptop drive (and a slow one at that) in the cheapest Macintosh, but oh well.
Re:The best notebook harddrive? (Score:1)
-Sarkoon
My 7k60 screams (Score:5, Insightful)
It's hard to express in words how much faster my machine "felt" in everyday use. Startup time alone went from so slow where I always put the thing to sleep -- to my shutting down quite often now because it doesn't seem to take an eternity to boot.
Number and words do not do justice to the speed improvements possible by upgrading a slow 4200RPM drive for a 7K(whatever) drive. If you can afford it, I highly suggest you consider upgrading your slow laptop drive to a 7200rpm drive even if your factory drive is not dead (and out of warranty), which was the case for me.
-Pete
Re:My 7k60 screams (Score:1)
Re:My 7k60 screams (Score:2)
Re:My 7k60 screams (Score:3, Interesting)
I have a Seagate 4200RPM drive in my laptop and while initial startup may be a bit slower than my desktop (by a matter of seconds) application performance is just fine.
Oh did I mention I have 768MB of ram in it and I'm not running Windows?
That's why when I look at buying a new laptop [to replace this thing when it eventually dies] I always look at the max ram. My next one will likely have 768 or 1GB initially [I originally upgraded this laptop from 256M to 768M].
Ram is cheaper on th
Re:My 7k60 screams (Score:2)
I love being able to copy files and start applications and do a variety of other disk I/O bound tasks fas
Re:My 7k60 screams (Score:2)
I suppose you are right though. Getting both a decent HD and amount of ram doesn't hurt and makes sense. Specially if you're a mac user, you have money to spend
Tom
Re:My 7k60 screams (Score:1)
Re:My 7k60 screams (Score:1)
Re:My 7k60 screams (Score:1)
Even the Momentus 5400.2 is a nice drive (Score:2)
That old drive was a major bottleneck, even though I have 256 MB RAM on this system. I ended up putting the old drive into a cheap USB enclosure.
Flash hybrid drive (Score:3, Interesting)
Samsung is planning on releasing a hybrid flash/disk drive in the second half of 2006, which is around the same time as Vista. The hybrid drive is said to use 10% less power by reducing spin up times and also reducing hd failure caused by dropping. When the flash memory is full the data is then written to disk.
What will they think of next?
Re:Flash hybrid drive (Score:2)
Hugely useful, especially for Mac users (Score:2, Insightful)
With more and more people doing video editing and compression (Final Cut, iMovie) and audio stuff (Logic, GarageBand)... it's very valuable to do this stuff on the go. It's not just gaming that sucks up resources.
So kudos to SR for putting this together, and it would be nice for Apple to provide speedier config options for its customers.
Notebook hard disk sizes haven't grown (Score:3, Interesting)
The hard disks being compared here have an 80gb or 100gb size; the biggest notebook hard disks I have seen are 120gb hard disks. We broke the 80gig barrier about a year ago; if disks were growing the way they were in the 1990s, we would have 160gb notebook hard disks by now. I get the feeling that it is going to take a few years to break the 200gb barrier.
I get the sense that the technology is maturing and that people aren't interested in getting really big hard disks any more. So we're not seeing the growth factors we used to have.
Re:Notebook hard disk sizes haven't grown (Score:3, Informative)
In fact we broke the 80 GB barrier a lot longer than a year ago. My T40 is well over 2 years old and came with an 80 GB drive.
After Seagate announced their next-generation 100 GB 7200 RPM drives (Momentus 7200.1), I waited over a year, checking every few months for availability. They never came and I gave up. Now I see they've fin
Re:Notebook hard disk sizes haven't grown (Score:1)
Re:Notebook hard disk sizes haven't grown (Score:1)
I want an upgrade (Score:3, Informative)
Problem is this laptop has a SATA->IDE bridge chip (apparantly made by Intel). So you can use an IDE drive.
Problem this gives is that most drives (with rare exception) generate a BIOS error on startup, that IBM/Lenovo has so far failed to fix.
I'm really hoping they get it fixed. With that drive, this would be the top performing laptop on the market. It really is a nice laptop. It does have a little thermal problem, causing the fan to stay somewhat loud, even when thermals cool, but I suspect that's a BIOS upgrade at some point in the future. Sounds like the settings are a little to harsh. IMHO not a big deal.
I'm really hoping this doesn't become a trend for Laptop HD's. I really want to upgrade. This thing is a real great example of what makes IBM/Lenovo laptops so good. Sturdy, fast, reliable. Just need that HD upgrade now
What good is a hard drive that is not reliable. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:What good is a hard drive that is not reliable. (Score:1)
It wasn't even on as much as the laptop; I had never bothered opening up the laptop to swap the drive in, so it just lived in the external aluminum enclosure that I originally planned to put the laptop's old drive in.
If the drive is stone-cold, I get about an hour or two runtime out of it. Any longer and it stops working. And the bearings sound really, really bad.
I guess it would take a lot longer for them to test long
IBM laptop (Score:1)
Re:IBM laptop (Score:3, Informative)
Make sure you've got 512 meg memory in the system though, not much point in replacing the hard drive if it's still going to swap to disk constantly.
Re:IBM laptop (Score:3, Informative)
To help improve matters (assuming, of course, that you have copious amounts of RAM installed) you can 'tune' Windows to reduce its use of the Paging File, thereby speeding th
A question. (Score:2)
Another missing.... (Score:2)
For those interested another review is at Tom's hardware [tomshardware.com].
At any rate, as well as missing the Toshiba drives, I noticed they were using the Samsung Spinpoint M40 80GB for review. I'd discounted that previously because of it's lacklustre performance (also highlighted in the Tom's Hardware review).
But (you knew there would be one!) there's the newer M60 series that was released recently. The HM100JC [samsung.com] looks interesting. Better t
Not Just For Notebooks (Score:2)
Nice to see 5 minutes AFTER my powerbook order... (Score:2)
From TFA: Those in the market for an upgraded notebook hard drive seek more capacity and/or speed. At a rather steep pr
Server performance of 2.5" drives - look out! (Score:3, Informative)
Oh, and want killer IOPS with microsecond seek times? Try the Adtron SATA flash drive [adtron.com]. 40GB will only set you back $18,000.
Re:Server performance of 2.5" drives - look out! (Score:1)
Re:Server performance of 2.5" drives - look out! (Score:2)
IBM/Hitachi is my top pick (Score:1)
Best drive for USB enclosure? (Score:3, Informative)
A USB enclosure for a 2.5" HD is cheap, small, and convenient, but which of these drives would be best for this?
Obviously speed doesn't matter.
Probably the most important factor is power consumption since these enclosures run off the USB power which is barely enough for these drives. The WD drive is strange in that it gets very good numbers for operating power dissapation and noise, but then is 2nd worst for startup power dissapation. I guess that puts it out of the running.
Here's the relevant page:
http://storagereview.com/articles/200511/notebook
Regarding the hard drive (Score:1)
Ruggedness (Score:1)
The review, however, did not do any ruggedness testing!! At the very least they should have dropped each drive, one at a time, onto a carpet, then wooden, then concrete floor. What good is a notebook drive if a minor bumps sees the heads or platters destroyed?
I think the review is/was largely a waste of space.
Why not the truly important test? (Score:2)
steve
Re:Fuck'em (Score:5, Insightful)
Don't worry, yours doesn't sound like a fanboy post or anything.
Good point, because it is such a pain in the ass clicking on Performance Database [storagereview.com] at the top and then choosing to sort by NOISE or POWER DISSIPATION.
Seriously I don't know how anyone can be expected to figure that out.
Re:Fuck'em (Score:2)
Storagereview completely ignored noise until recently, and their test criteria are more then questionable.
They dont meassure access noise at all, and their idle nosie meassurements are usually in "xx mm" distance, with xx being a low number... Which doesnt mean shit, as this will only meassure noise emitted right there (whatever surface they put the sensor above), but not the "real" noise profile you get in normal (50cm or so) working distance.
Performance-wise, otoh, their testbed is ve
Re:Fuck'em (Score:2)
SR has never focused on noise and heat production factors until very recently. Their criterias are sub-par, as well as the documentation of their testing benches (check SPCR, they explain everything about their testing methodologies and update them as soon as they find a flaw).
SPRC has been focusing nearly exclusively on silence and heat issues (notice that
Durability (Score:2)
Then it measures only Office DriveMark 2006, High-End DriveMark 2006, FarCry, The Sims 2, World of Warcraft, IOMeter File Server Tests, Average Read Access Time, Average Write Access Time, WB99 Disk/Read Transfer Rate, WB99 Disk/Read Transfer Rate, Idle Noise, Idle Power Dissipation, Active Power Dissipation, 12V Maximum Power Dissipation, and 5V Maximum Power Dissipation.
Where's the
Re:Durability (Score:2)
Really I don't see the big deal here.
Re:Durability (Score:2)
Fair enough, perhaps our friendly neighborhood review web site would compare and contrast those specs.
Durability was mentioned only to establish how different considerations are when looking into hard drives for laptops vs. hard drives for desktops.
This, of course, is the point. It was a laptop drive review. Assuming (as the article itself asserts) that those buying laptop drives care about durability, some data on durabili
Re:Fuck'em (Score:1)
I've never been able to take SR that seriously since they lost their drive reliability results back in 2002 due to a HD failure
Re:Fuck'em (Score:2)
Except that they didn't lose their database in a hard drive failure--it was deletion (the drive was fine). It isn't like Storagereview's website is run on an in-house server in which SR chooses the drives and controllers and such.
Like most review websites, it is run on a dedicated server on one of many hosting services. These companies generally have a generic (and cheap) con