OK, so I'm gonna try to address multiple questions/comments in one posting.
david123, your approach to supporting multiple drives (cable all of them to the IDE, and switch power to the ONE drive you want enabled at a time) should work just fine. This is the technique used by Ferrell in his Project 411GB tutorial, found on this site. As for the merits of switching EEPROMs and techniques for doing so, I'll leave that to others.
alikaz, these next two are for you...
(dusts off Electronics 101 text book -- it's been a looooong time...)
Referring to Dysfunction's wiring schematic, it looks correct to me. The key is that pin 32 (Vcc) is never connected directly to pin 16 (ground)... it is connected through a 10K resistor; this prevents the short circuit. The theory is simple: the Chip Enable pin for the EEPROM (pin 22) is an "active low" signal (thus the bar over the signal name == logical "NOT"); this means that the chip is enabled when the signal present is at logic 0 (i.e. ground). When the switch is thrown to the right in the diagram (as depicted), CE is pulled
to ground through the 10K resistor; since it is grounded, and it is an active low signal, the chip is ENABLED when the switch is in the position shown. When the switch is thrown the other way, CE is tied to Vcc (logic 1), thus the chip is DISABLED. Again, no short circuit occurs because of the 10K resistor between Vcc and ground.
Actually, going through this exercise with you WAS valuable, as the table in my doc is INCORRECT as written. You really want to wire one side of the switch to pin 22 on the EEPROM, NOT pin 16 (or else you DO get a short circuit, as the 10K resistor would be bypassed). THANK YOU FOR HELPING TO CORRECT THIS! I will update the document immediately.
With your two SPST switches in hand, if you connect one switch to 22 and 32, and the other switch to 32 and E#, you should be all set to enable/disable by turning one switch on and the other off. Yes, I know you have those switches on hand, but if it were me I'd take the time to go grab an SPDT or DPDT switch and switch both connections as per my tutorial, as I wouldn't want to be bothered with throwing two switches instead of one. (Yes, I *am* that much of a slacker.)
Also note that Dysfunction's diagram DOES include a 10 uF tantalum capacitor between pins 16 and 32 (ground and Vcc). This should help with noise problems that could cause instability. If you do install this cap (recommended), be sure to observe the polarity: one lead on the cap will have a "+" sign, and that lead should go to pin 32 (Vcc). This is indicated on the diagram.
Based on feedback, I believe I will include the diagrams in the next rev of the tutorial. In fact, I may very well include much of this text.
Captain Dunsel