The simple answer is yes. UDMA allows for data transfer to occur on both the rising and falling edges of the interface clock so instead of a single transfer of data for each clock cycle, you get two.
There are however, serveral UDMA Modes with 5 being basically the last and the whole question sorta becomes moot with the concept of SATA drives. UDMA (aka UltraATA) basically capped out at 133(mb/s) and SATA drives have for the most part made these obsolete.
Current SATA (Serial ATA) standard is 3gb/s and is on the cusp of moving to 6gb/s
Newer models of tapes drives are generally faster than newer models of dvd drives; sometimes up to 4 times faster.
Platter-based drives have a different reading system which is faster than a typical SSD.
some objects faster than the others because its due to the movement of the earth.... hahah joke lang :))
why are some objects faster than other
She drives faster than I.
The RPM of your hard drive. A 7000RPM drive is faster than a 5000RPM drive, and an SSD is faster than all Platter hard drives.
Yes. Flash drives work just as well in reading memory as a CD or your hard drive. Plus, flash drives have a tendency to read faster than hard drives, so it may load faster.
why are some objects faster than other
why are some objects faster than other
why are some objects faster than other
Solid state drives, or SSD's, are faster and more high performance than hard-disk drives. They also have no moving parts, which makes them much more reliable.
Near zero latency on seek means faster response times and better performance