What Is SCSI? and Why Choose It For Your Peripheral Connection?
What Is SCSI? and Why Choose It For Your Peripheral Connection?
What Is SCSI? and Why Choose It For Your Peripheral Connection?
SCSI stands for "Small Computer System Interface" and is pronounced "scuzzy". SCSI is a snazzy term for a simple concept: it is the name for a connection from your PC to your hard drive and your other peripherals. This connection is made using a SCSI card, a card that fits inside your computer. SCSI is Your Best Choice To:
deliver the performance power users want from their desktop or PC workstation connect to the fastest and highest-capacity hard drives and peripherals
Windows NT has up to 3 times faster throughput with SCSI than EIDE Photoshop is 22% faster with SCSI than EIDE* Filemaker Pro is 14% faster with SCSI than EIDE* AutoCAD is 33% faster with SCSI than EIDE*
a SCSI card to your computer, you get quick, easy connectivity to the fastest, and highest-capacity peripherals on the market. And SCSI is surprisingly easy to install. Here are some peripheral facts you should know:
Zip drives using a SCSI connection are 6 times faster than those using a parallel connection SCSI scanners are 2 times faster than parallel ones The fastest, highest-capacity hard drives are SCSI SCSI can connect 7 to 15 internal or external peripherals on a single card. EIDE and ultra DMA/33 are limited to a maximum of 4 internal devices.