Seagate Momentus & Thinkpad Active Protection
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hellosailor
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Seagate Momentus & Thinkpad Active Protection
I bit the bullet, opted for the Seagate 320GB 7200rpm drive with no one able to say how or if that would work with the Lenovo Thinkpad Active Protection system or not. (It has it's own protection system built in.)
Just confirmed tonight, the TAPS will recognize what the drive is doing. Swinging the laptop while video is playing will halt the video--as normal--and still generates the normal TAPS message that the drive has been stopped.
So, apparently it will work, even if Seagate and Lenono [sic] have no idea about that.
Just confirmed tonight, the TAPS will recognize what the drive is doing. Swinging the laptop while video is playing will halt the video--as normal--and still generates the normal TAPS message that the drive has been stopped.
So, apparently it will work, even if Seagate and Lenono [sic] have no idea about that.
"The only good silicon life form, is a dead silicon life form." [Will Rogers]
-- Harboring a retired T61P with Vista/U/32 and housebreaking a younger W530 foolishly upgraded from Win7/64 to Win10.
-- Harboring a retired T61P with Vista/U/32 and housebreaking a younger W530 foolishly upgraded from Win7/64 to Win10.
Why would they have no idea about that?So, apparently it will work, even if Seagate and Lenono [sic] have no idea about that.
Marin
IBM Lenovo Z61p | 15.4'' WUXGA | Intel Core 2 Duo T7400 2x 2.16GHz | 4 GB Kingston HyperX | Hitachi 7K500 500 GB + WD 1TB (USB) | ATI Mobility FireGL V5200 | ThinkPad Atheros a/b/g | Analog Devices AD1981HD | Win 7 x86 + ArchLinux 2009.08 x64 (number crunching)
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hellosailor
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- Location: NY, NY
Ron, the video stops when the drive parks--but that only tells you the drive's system is working, it doesn't tell you if TAPS (which in theory has adjustable settings, unlike the fixed ones in the drive) is working.
Marin-
Seagate has no idea if their drive's firmware integrates with the Lenono software, because they don't test Lenono computers. Similarly, Lenono doesn't test Seagate drives because they are an IBM-assignee, and they used a sole-source supplier of hard drives: Hitachi, who are also the IBM "DeathStar" drive technology assignee. Lenono may be required to use Hitachi, or they may receive a substantial discount for using them, because both are "sons of IBM".
From what I'm repeatedly told, the Thinkpads DO NOT have ny motion sensor in them, the sensor is IN THE DRIVE if the drive is so equipped. If you think there is an accelerometer in the computer itself--please, tell me where it is.
Marin-
Seagate has no idea if their drive's firmware integrates with the Lenono software, because they don't test Lenono computers. Similarly, Lenono doesn't test Seagate drives because they are an IBM-assignee, and they used a sole-source supplier of hard drives: Hitachi, who are also the IBM "DeathStar" drive technology assignee. Lenono may be required to use Hitachi, or they may receive a substantial discount for using them, because both are "sons of IBM".
From what I'm repeatedly told, the Thinkpads DO NOT have ny motion sensor in them, the sensor is IN THE DRIVE if the drive is so equipped. If you think there is an accelerometer in the computer itself--please, tell me where it is.
"The only good silicon life form, is a dead silicon life form." [Will Rogers]
-- Harboring a retired T61P with Vista/U/32 and housebreaking a younger W530 foolishly upgraded from Win7/64 to Win10.
-- Harboring a retired T61P with Vista/U/32 and housebreaking a younger W530 foolishly upgraded from Win7/64 to Win10.
This is a good question indeed and it changes things a lotFrom what I'm repeatedly told, the Thinkpads DO NOT have ny motion sensor in them, the sensor is IN THE DRIVE if the drive is so equipped. If you think there is an accelerometer in the computer itself--please, tell me where it is.
IBM Lenovo Z61p | 15.4'' WUXGA | Intel Core 2 Duo T7400 2x 2.16GHz | 4 GB Kingston HyperX | Hitachi 7K500 500 GB + WD 1TB (USB) | ATI Mobility FireGL V5200 | ThinkPad Atheros a/b/g | Analog Devices AD1981HD | Win 7 x86 + ArchLinux 2009.08 x64 (number crunching)
I have not read such nonsense in a long time. What makes you say that Lenovo only uses Hitachi drives in Thinkpads? Nor is Hitachi in any way a "son of IBM" (and neither is Lenovo, for that matter). What you are probably referring to is HGST and even in that one IBM does no longer have a big stake.hellosailor wrote:...
Similarly, Lenono doesn't test Seagate drives because they are an IBM-assignee, and they used a sole-source supplier of hard drives: Hitachi, who are also the IBM "DeathStar" drive technology assignee. Lenono may be required to use Hitachi, or they may receive a substantial discount for using them, because both are "sons of IBM".
Well, you've been told wrong. Read here:hellosailor wrote: From what I'm repeatedly told, the Thinkpads DO NOT have ny motion sensor in them, the sensor is IN THE DRIVE if the drive is so equipped. If you think there is an accelerometer in the computer itself--please, tell me where it is.
http://www-307.ibm.com/pc/support/site. ... migr-53167
Hm, I´ve read that, too. So, actually, no matter what drive is put into the ThinkPad, it will be protected by Lenovo Active Protection System, which is cool since people like me sometimes use quite old HDDs in their relative new machines for reasons inexplicable hereWell, you've been told wrong. Read here:
http://www-307.ibm.com/pc/support/site. ... migr-53167
Cheers
Marin
IBM Lenovo Z61p | 15.4'' WUXGA | Intel Core 2 Duo T7400 2x 2.16GHz | 4 GB Kingston HyperX | Hitachi 7K500 500 GB + WD 1TB (USB) | ATI Mobility FireGL V5200 | ThinkPad Atheros a/b/g | Analog Devices AD1981HD | Win 7 x86 + ArchLinux 2009.08 x64 (number crunching)
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hellosailor
- Senior Member

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- Joined: Sat Jan 05, 2008 1:52 pm
- Location: NY, NY
Maybe it is nonsense, but Lenono support told me directly that the TAPS required the OEM drives.
And the referenced web article--from 2003 and referring to twpo specific models only--says that TAPS can be tested uing PC-Doctor under "Other Devices". PCD5 shows no listing for an accelerometer device in my computer.
"Nonsense" would be building the accelerometer in the laptop--after hard drives have become compact enough to have one onboard. Duplicate parts only raise prices! So all you've proved is that two five-year-old systems did not have an accelerometer on their drives, they needed a separate one onboard.
As for Hitachi and IBM having no relationship, IBM very definitely sold off their drive manufacturing business to Hitachi back when the DeskStar was a really hot drive. (What I call the "DeathStar"). Part of the sell-off terms were that Hitach would continue to manufacture and supply them to IBM--at better terms than they charged anyone else. That agreement would typically continue with whoever IBM sold off their computer product lines to, i.e. Lenono.
You think there's an accelerometer on the T61 motherboard? OK, I'm from Missouri. Show me. It should be easy enough to spot.
The fact that the 2003 system only worked with the drive in the primary bay, indicates that the system was not using the internal sensor in a drive, and had no communications path to it. That was PATA days, this is SATA, all the more reason to have different ways to monitor the drive, too.
Interestingly--there are a couple of web pages referencing hacking the accelerometer that's in some Tpad models, and sounding like it is in the laptop not the drive. But they also reference a couple of driver files (i.e. shock*.sys) that are used to support that hardware--and I've got no sign of those in my system.
And the referenced web article--from 2003 and referring to twpo specific models only--says that TAPS can be tested uing PC-Doctor under "Other Devices". PCD5 shows no listing for an accelerometer device in my computer.
"Nonsense" would be building the accelerometer in the laptop--after hard drives have become compact enough to have one onboard. Duplicate parts only raise prices! So all you've proved is that two five-year-old systems did not have an accelerometer on their drives, they needed a separate one onboard.
As for Hitachi and IBM having no relationship, IBM very definitely sold off their drive manufacturing business to Hitachi back when the DeskStar was a really hot drive. (What I call the "DeathStar"). Part of the sell-off terms were that Hitach would continue to manufacture and supply them to IBM--at better terms than they charged anyone else. That agreement would typically continue with whoever IBM sold off their computer product lines to, i.e. Lenono.
You think there's an accelerometer on the T61 motherboard? OK, I'm from Missouri. Show me. It should be easy enough to spot.
The fact that the 2003 system only worked with the drive in the primary bay, indicates that the system was not using the internal sensor in a drive, and had no communications path to it. That was PATA days, this is SATA, all the more reason to have different ways to monitor the drive, too.
Interestingly--there are a couple of web pages referencing hacking the accelerometer that's in some Tpad models, and sounding like it is in the laptop not the drive. But they also reference a couple of driver files (i.e. shock*.sys) that are used to support that hardware--and I've got no sign of those in my system.
"The only good silicon life form, is a dead silicon life form." [Will Rogers]
-- Harboring a retired T61P with Vista/U/32 and housebreaking a younger W530 foolishly upgraded from Win7/64 to Win10.
-- Harboring a retired T61P with Vista/U/32 and housebreaking a younger W530 foolishly upgraded from Win7/64 to Win10.
So taking your logic, how would the Thinkpad recognize that it is shaken if it didn't have any hardware sensors built-in? Oh, it asks the hard disk, there is a secret handshake between the Thinkpad and the hard disk, I see. But my hard disk doesn't have a shock sensor built in. Now what? Yet the "Thinkvantage Active Protection System" still works. I don't know how many more links one needs to provide (and I'm sure you are able to use google yourself), but here's another one: http://www.thinkwiki.org/wiki/Active_Protection_System
They will also tell you that only the HDs they sell are supported and guaranteed to work in the Thinkpad (no matter whether you want to use TAPS or not), even though any 9.5 mm SATA drive will do for the T6x....but Lenono support told me directly that the TAPS required the OEM drives.
Not quite correct. IBM and Hitachi formed a joined venture five years ago (HGST). IBM has since divested the majority of its stake in that joint venture. Read more about it here.IBM very definitely sold off their drive manufacturing business to Hitachi...
And you know this because you were intimately involved in these negotiations five/six years ago?Part of the sell-off terms were that Hitach would continue to manufacture and supply them to IBM--at better terms than they charged anyone else.
OK, so it wouldn't be possible that they are now named differently?But they also reference a couple of driver files (i.e. shock*.sys) that are used to support that hardware--and I've got no sign of those in my system.
Modern T6x Thinkpads definitely have a built-in motion sensor. You can even rig them up to some games and use the Thinkpad as a large wii-long control. See this:
http://lenovoblogs.com/insidethebox/?p=55
I've done it - it works great!
http://lenovoblogs.com/insidethebox/?p=55
I've done it - it works great!
Apathy is on the rise, but nobody seems to care.
The Thinkpad APS sensor is built into the motherboard on the laptop.
This can be proven by installing a non-OEM hard drive, such as I have, one that has no built in APS, and you'll the APS icon in the taskbar is still totally capable of detecting tilt and such.
It is NOT builtin to the OEM hitachi hard drives.
This can be proven by installing a non-OEM hard drive, such as I have, one that has no built in APS, and you'll the APS icon in the taskbar is still totally capable of detecting tilt and such.
It is NOT builtin to the OEM hitachi hard drives.
Mike Shoup
IdeaPad Y510: Core 2 Duo, 15.4" WXGA, 3GB RAM, 160 GB hard drive, Windows Vista Business
ThinkPad T60p: Core Duo T2300, 14.1" XGA+ TFT, 2GB RAM, 160GB Hard Drive, dual boot with Windows XP Pro and Ubuntu 8.04 LTS
IdeaPad Y510: Core 2 Duo, 15.4" WXGA, 3GB RAM, 160 GB hard drive, Windows Vista Business
ThinkPad T60p: Core Duo T2300, 14.1" XGA+ TFT, 2GB RAM, 160GB Hard Drive, dual boot with Windows XP Pro and Ubuntu 8.04 LTS
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DarkScythe
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I believe the Thinkpad Active Protection System's inner workings were explored previously in this Hitachi Harddisk thread.
From Quagmyre's in-depth research, I had concluded this:
The biggest thing was the firmware issue, but that may not be required, as Quagmyre demonstrates later in that thread a way to query the hard drive to see if it has those specific options enabled in the drive's original firmware. I'm not sure if simply having the icon react (which only indicates that the chip is working) and a video stop definitively means that APS works or not, as there's that issue with the drive heads being parked before or after flushing the drive cache.
From Quagmyre's in-depth research, I had concluded this:
I'm pretty sure at least the T60's and newer should have the onboard sensor already, but I have no idea how that conflicts with the Seagate's own built-in sensor. I suppose the built-in one would have a higher priority and over-ride any commands sent by the Thinkpad, but I could be wrong (only speculating here.)[...] Anyway, so it seems we need 3 things to fully enable HD-APS here.. The chip on the mobo, the HD with Ramp Load/Unload technology, AND the firmware to Unload heads without flushing drive cache [...]
The biggest thing was the firmware issue, but that may not be required, as Quagmyre demonstrates later in that thread a way to query the hard drive to see if it has those specific options enabled in the drive's original firmware. I'm not sure if simply having the icon react (which only indicates that the chip is working) and a video stop definitively means that APS works or not, as there's that issue with the drive heads being parked before or after flushing the drive cache.
~Sakura~
P182 | GA-EP35-DS3P | E8400@400x9 | 2x2GB DDR2-800 | 8800GT
Raptor150+74 | 3xWD500GB | WD640GB | SH-S203B | AudioEngine A5
~Ayu~
IBM T60 2613-CTO | 15" Flexview | T5500 @0.95v
ATI X1300 | 2x2GB | 7K320 320GB | NMB KB | Fingerprint
P182 | GA-EP35-DS3P | E8400@400x9 | 2x2GB DDR2-800 | 8800GT
Raptor150+74 | 3xWD500GB | WD640GB | SH-S203B | AudioEngine A5
~Ayu~
IBM T60 2613-CTO | 15" Flexview | T5500 @0.95v
ATI X1300 | 2x2GB | 7K320 320GB | NMB KB | Fingerprint
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hellosailor
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You raise a good point, there is plenty of room for conflicts at the software command level. Especially, from the little I understand of it, as the Seagate ramps the heads off the platters as a matter of course while idle--not just when a shock is detected.
I also found a utility online that allows you to see the Tpad accelerometer's output in semi-real time. Run the applet, and as you tilt the computer 9even slowly) it generates different numbers reflecting the current x/y tilts in degrees. Which, incidentally, are uncalibrated so a "flat" Tpad may show a 20d/25d tilt in both axes. Apparently calbration is left as a minor software exercise, too.
I also found a utility online that allows you to see the Tpad accelerometer's output in semi-real time. Run the applet, and as you tilt the computer 9even slowly) it generates different numbers reflecting the current x/y tilts in degrees. Which, incidentally, are uncalibrated so a "flat" Tpad may show a 20d/25d tilt in both axes. Apparently calbration is left as a minor software exercise, too.
"The only good silicon life form, is a dead silicon life form." [Will Rogers]
-- Harboring a retired T61P with Vista/U/32 and housebreaking a younger W530 foolishly upgraded from Win7/64 to Win10.
-- Harboring a retired T61P with Vista/U/32 and housebreaking a younger W530 foolishly upgraded from Win7/64 to Win10.
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