Tony wrote:
With SMART enabled, NASLite-2 launches a complete hard disk SMART self test that starts at boot time and continues for a duration that varies based on disk type, size and firmware. That alone can often reduce performance to as low as 20%.
As I have mentioned in my other current thread, although SMART should be on, it apparently is not, so this is probably not a factor. Also, after the NASLite box starts up, the disk activity light remains out, which argues against any disk test going on in the background.
Quote:
In addition, if you are to compare performance, you should do that on the same hardware and not on different machines. Just because you are using all new components for your NASLite machine, that is no guarantee that they all work well together.
Probably so, but that isn't really practical. But, in order to install Win2000 on the NASLite machine, I'd have to reformat one of more drives. And to test NASLite on the Win2000 box, the same is true. There aren't really any "components" to not work together in the NASLite box... motherboard, CPU, memory, drives. No add-on cards, etc.
Quote:
In your "benchmarking", if all things are equal, NASLite will hold it's own pretty well. If it didn't, Ralph and I will be out of a job
It doesn't seem unreasonable to expect a P4-3.0 with 512 MB and mobo GB lan to outperform a P4-1.8 with 384 MB and a PCI GB lan...