The dual port is a separate feature from full-duplex.
Dual porting provides a redundant data path, which performs two functions:
1) Allows the drive to operate at 6GB/s instead of the regular 3GB/s (port combining for superior performance).
2) Allows the drive to continue functioning if and when one port becomes nonfunctional (eliminates single point of failure).
If dual porting were the feature that provided full duplex, neither of these functions would work, however all SAS serial interfaces are inherently full-duplex.
Note also that SATA does not support dual ports or full duplex, even on a controller that supports both SATA and SAS drives. You must use SAS drives to have these features.
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Repetitive Dive
dive drive
Dive, drive, hive, alive, five, etc...
dance, drive , dive ,dig ,
Yes. The ending silent E gives "drive" a long I sound, to rhyme with dive and five.
The homophone of "drive" is "dive." Both words sound the same but have different meanings.
Hit Every Obstacle in a Single Dive
A submarine is a kind of boat. But regular boats only use the surface of the water while subs also can dive and travel below the surface.
Make the drive up to the Ranch in Gardiner, NY. It's worth the drive!
The difference between "regular" diving and synchronized diving is the scoring and the athletes. In "regular" diving one diver goes at a time and that one diver is scored based on that one dive. In synchronized diving, TWO people do the SAME DIVE at the SAME TIME to try and be as accurate and identical to each other as possible. The two athletes are then given ONE score for both dives based on their precision and timing.