Buyers' Guide to Hard Drives
If you work mostly in standard office programs, nearly any drive will do. But speed counts for multimedia authoring.

The stunning capacity of today's hard drives--which doubles every 12 to 18 months--has made it possible, even economical, to turn a PC into a multimedia machine holding gobs of audio and video files. And drives of 200GB or more should be out by the time you read this.
Internal hard drives with Serial ATA connections have thin cables that make more-compact computer designs possible. The technology won't become common for at least another year, however. (See "Your Next Hard Drive" for more information.)
Though our tests show that today's hard drives all perform about the same when running regular business applications, people who work with large images and digital video greatly benefit from speedy drives. In our tests with Adobe Photoshop, for example, a system fitted with the fastest drive completed a complex task (applying filters and rotating an image multiple times) almost 30 percent quicker than did the same system with the slowest drive installed.
Key Features
If you want high capacity, remember that PCs usually have room for two hard drives. You may save money by purchasing, say, two 80GB drives instead of a single 160GB unit that sells for a premium.
Rotational speed: Current ATA hard drives spin their disks at either 5400 or 7200 revolutions per minute. Usually, but not always, the 7200-rpm drives retrieve data faster. For example, in our tests, the 80GB, 5400-rpm Maxtor DiamondMax D540X copied a 1.2GB file 33 percent faster than the 80GB, 7200-rpm Seagate Barracuda ATA IV. Sometimes other factors, such as the algorithms drives use to retrieve data, can affect performance.
Buffer: When a system requests data, a hard drive doesn't simply fetch what is requested; it also loads its buffer memory with additional information that the processor is likely to ask for next. We've found that drives with an 8MB buffer tend to perform better on our disk-intensive Photoshop and file-search tests.
Recommendations
Consider a big drive (over 40GB) or two smaller drives if you store a lot of digital images and audio, or any quantity of video. If you also edit your images and video, go for high-performance drives--generally 7200-rpm models.
