On Monday 08 August 2005 11:01 pm, Randall R Schulz wrote:
Stan,
Aside from personal experience from years of hardware/software compatibility testing?
Yes, aside from that. Because this sounds an awful lot like superstition, so I'm looking for some hard facts and documented empirical data, not just assumptions and anecdotes. Absent such facts, I'm rather doubtful that this effect is real. Sorry, forgot to google first and supply the facts.
And using phrases like "Can you say blah-blah-blah," does not get high marks with me. If your hardware exceeds SCSI specs, then powering down won't bring it into spec. I forgot to add the "this isn't meant as a personal slight, just a
colloquialism" tag to the "Can you say", sorry.
In testing to verify whether our SCSI was in spec or not we went through a ton of tests and our SCSI expert had to know that everything started at 0. He did as much of his SCSI coding in assembler as was possible. Speed demon. Never said powering down brought anything into spec. What it did was level the playing field to the least common denominator so he had a reference point to measure what was or wasn't in spec. I see others did do some googling on this phenomenon and came up with real evidence...
...
Stan
Randall Schulz
P.S. Your "Reply-To" header is badly munged. Thanks, is it better now?
Stan