The 1.8" drive is just slower overall. Basically, it is slower than the slowest 4200rpm drive, which is slower than the 4200rpm 2.5" drives, which in turn is slower than a 4200rpm desktop drive.
For me, with a clean install, it was slow booting. However, I prefer notebooks with 7200rpm 60GB Hitachi's.
Adobe Acrobat doesn't take all that long to load. I tried it on my T42 and on my desktop which has a 10,000rpm WD Raptor. The load time was not significant enough to bother timing it.
The best way to explain it is:
Fast hard drives (as long as you have enough memory) make everything seem faster and just make the whole system seem a lot zippier. CPU's are unlikely to be a huge bottleneck, since people run on battery at a fraction of the rated speed. If you have 512MB to 1GB of RAM, the remaining bottleneck is going to be the hard drive.
When PC's used to run DOS, you could run ramdisks and run entire programs from RAM without ever hitting a hard drive for data. I used to (in the DOS days) have 3 or 4 programs loaded into RAM, and it worked great.
Windows XP, however, will not run from RAM. Any way you slice it, and regardless of what settings you tweak, XP hits hard drives all of the time.
A faster hard drive just means a notebook/desktop that performs quicker.
Andrew
Austin, TX
rayfranco wrote:...I would appreciate any comments about the 1.8" drive in the X40 or X41. Is it the IBM software that makes it slow booting, and how fast does it load programs such as Adobe Acrobat.