ATA and IDE are effectively identical and refer to the practice of moving the drive controller logic to the mass-storage, the reasonably high-level protocol between the drive and the computer and the standard cabling to do it. The cabling was retroactively renamed PATA when SATA was developed.

A SATA drive will identify itself as such but this is not much more than information. It still communicates using the ATA protocol and the layer that works with that will not care if the cable is PATA or SATA. Thus the potentially misleading information in your printout. :-)

Wade.