Not too long ago a certain someone named Ripley told me that even the older 5200rpm drives have just as good a performance as 7200 drives with large memory caches. Different day different story I guess.
I know for a fact that multiple drives will allow for faster access of data especially over partitioning.
I went to school with some people that work at Microsoft Ripley. They are not infallible.
Please show me where I said that because I have never said anything such. This is the second time in a row that you make claims that are exactly reverse to the ones I made in reality. Either you're trolling or you simply do not understand what you read.
What I said was that a benchmark test showed a new 2Tb harddrive @ 5400rpm beating a smaller older 7200rpm drive. Which was and is a fact. It seems you still cannot understand the concept of data density and what it does to read/write performance. I'll give you a clue: it increases it proportionally with increase of density.
This is because the tracking head can pass more data per revolution compared to a smaller, lower density drive. If the data density difference is large enough (+ larger cache effect etc. taken into account) even the slower spinning drive can beat the faster spinning one in throughput performance.
As it is very clear that you cannot comprehend the technical details we're discussing here IMO it would be best to avoid commenting.
I'll give you a benefit of a doubt with Microsoft experts being fallible. Please prove the article I posted as being wrong from a professional, reliable source.