Quote:
Originally Posted by rowan
+1 for eSATA, transfers go at native speed (same as if the drive was installed inside your computer) rather than being shoehorned through another interface such as USB or Firewire.
And I also hate Seagate. I bought 4 drives and ended up with (including the replacements) 6 new drives, 6 recos, 7 failures.
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Only if you remove the switcher stopping full 3 gb/s transfer speed that is shipped on most esata drives stock... otherwise you are only getting 1.5, which is still way better than usb... but yeah...

