![]() So what you said isn't true because what happens in reality is not only does the staff change almost immediately if they are not superior in EVERY WAY (cost most importantly) parts and materials are changed very quickly if they are not superior in EVERY WAY (cost most importantly) any segment that can be cut to improve profitability is cut. supply contracts are bought out or cancelled if they don't meet profitability requirements ASAP. while doing all the contracts for everything are evaluated and everything that can be cut to help pay for the acquisition is gutted as much as is still profitable, that means whole segments can and typically are sold off if the buyer has a cheaper solution already implemented in such types of acquisition deals. first thing to change is the staff like within 6 weeks and still goes on for 6 months to 2 years, then the thinking which is also why alot of staff who can't cope or disagree are gone. You sir have no experience in the real world or in business i see. that will take time to happen, and who is to say if they will change for the better or worse. just cause ownership changes doesn't mean performance or features and characteristics of the drives are going to change right away. TechcuriousThe Hitachi and Samsung drives are still manufactured in the same factories they were before. Western Digital's Scorpio Blue WD10JPVT tops the performance-per-watt chart with an outstanding score of 78.1. But average power use seems pretty normal, and a 59.6-point performance-per-watt rating is better than the other three drives. For example, idle power sits at 0.8 W, while the maximum value among its competitors is 0.6 W. Occasionally, though, its power draw is slightly higher than average. With average access times of 16.4 ms (read) and 15.5 ms (write), the Hitachi disk lands in the middle of the pack. Hampered by 5400 RPM spindles, the three other disks in our update, Hitachi's Travelstar 5K1000, Toshiba's MQ010A, and Western Digital's Scorpio Blue, naturally trail the 7200 RPM 7K750 by a significant margin. ![]() Other 7200 RPM specimens, such as the Seagate Momentus and Momentus XT, trail the 7K750 and Scorpio Black by 6 MB/s. ![]() ![]() Western Digital's drive only wins by a slim margin after averaging the maximum, average, and minimum data rates of the two competitors. The Travelstar 7K750 is a very fast mobile disk, averaging 98 MB/s sequential read and write rates, putting it on a par with Western Digital's Scorpio Black WD7500BPKT (the chart leader). ![]()
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