I've been rather curious about the Matrix RAID setups by Intel, myself. I'm glad someone found out about the positioning of the RAID1 and RAID0. From reading their description of it in the marketing points, it sounded like that part didn't matter. But here's something to remember: If you're putting your RAID1 first, and RAID0 second, then I'd say you're not making the best use of your hard drive, and may as well just do RAID1 on the whole thing. The reason is that if you put the RAID0 as the second RAID, you're then using the slowest part of the hard drive for your system partition which is the most important for speed.
So, here are a couple of options I can think of:
Senerio 1:
Disk0:
Partition into 2 or 3 partitions: 1. System, 2. SWAP file/Virtual memory, 3. data/backup
Disk1:
Partition into 1 or 2 partitions: 1. SWAP file/Virtual Memory, 2. Data.
Here's my thoughts there:
Disk 0, Partition 0 = System, Partition 1 = a SWAP file, Parition 3 either left blank, or used as a data backup partition.
Disk 1, Partition 0 = SWAP file, Partition 1 = data file..
Then, you set in your performanc settings custom SWAP/Virtual Ram settings... Disk1,Part0 as your primary SWAP, and then you could also set the one on disk0... That might help a little with performance... or you could use either or, I can see benefits of any of the 3 scenerios for that..
Then if you wanted to use the latter portion of disk0, you could use a backup/sync program to back up your data drive to that portion, so long as it doesn't take up all your disk space.
Here's my thinking on this:
The system could be loaded into the first 80 to 100 GB of your first drive. That way it's always using the fastest part of the hard drive. Then the SWAP file could use the next portion, or the first portion of the second drive. Then the data file would use whatever portion on the second drive, and then be backed up on a not all-the-time basis to the latter portion of your first drive, so you're still getting use of it..
The other option would be, if wanting to buy more storage....
RAID1 of a couple small hard drives as mentioned by BBB, either 2 Velociraptors - small 80GB ones avail on eBay, or whatever. That way if the system fails, you're still good to go. Then RAID 1 for your data drives.
This would all work well and good for most purposes. The time when a RAID 0 would help primarily would be for media editing, especially video editing, and there especially if dealing with HD video, b/c you're dealing with huge files. In that case, it'd be nice/ideal to have at least 3 drives or RAID setups:
RAID1 system, RAID1 for data store, RAID 0 for editing... But then if you're getting into using at least 6 drives, you'd better be sure of your power supply.
Also, check the web on reliability of onboard RAID, particularly Intel Matrix RAID. I've read some pretty bad stories there. Still could be worth it, especially if you back everything up, but just keep it in mind. ;p
Then of course, you can always go to SSD for the system, and RAID1 the 2 640GB drives for your data...
The options are endless... a good thing and a bad thing at the same time.
Another cheap option is to look at the Samsung F3 drives to fill any additional drive needs. They're super fast, super quiet, and super cheap compared to the alternatives.
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"If to err is human, then I must be some kind of human!" -Me