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September 1996

Iomega’s Zip Drive


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A place for your stuff

Getting stuff on and off your Windows NT system is no small concern. Small businesses, especially graphics design firms, can't afford fancy output devices, so such firms have to run down to the service bureau with the files. For help, check out the popular new Iomega Zip cartridge drive. It works well under NT, once you install the right drivers.

A Place for My Stuff
In the Early Cretaceous era of personal computing, I attended the University of California at San Diego. During the Blaise of glory that was the UCSD Pascal project, we carried data around on 8" floppies in shocking-pink Dysan disk boxes. These floppies first held 241KB, then 1.2MB, each. We worked on a variety of computers, all long since obsolete, and felt superior to the Apple II community with its dinky 5.25" floppies.

Ironically, since then, the standard for portable data-storage has grown only 20%, to 1.44MB, while everything else in the computer industry expanded in orders of magnitude. True, the physical size of the disk has shrunk to 3.5", and taste has relegated the shocking-pink disk box to toxic-waste dumps. But no single unit of read/write storage has even vaguely threatened the floppy for universality.

Finally, that monopoly appears to be breaking up. Now NT 3.51 Service Pack 4 is 10MB; Netscape plugins are 2MB each; and by adding one graphic, you can create a WordPro document that overflows one floppy. We need a new way to transport files, and if any random-access, read/write medium has a chance to rival the floppy, the 100MB Iomega Zip disk is it.

This versatile storage medium has the low end of the removable market to itself, now that SyQuest has withdrawn the 135MB SyJet. On the horizon are a few new removables, notably the DL120 drive, which will read and write regular 1.44MB 3.5" floppies and its 120MB cartridges. But so far, the DL120 is shipping only with Compaqs.

The Zip is becoming ubiquitous: It's shipping as an internal drive in HP desktops, Kinko's puts it on all in-store rental computers, and every graphics output business has at least one. A friend jokes that he has all the 3.5" disks he'll ever need, and he wants America Online to send out Zips. They're universal the way SyQuest 44MB drives never quite were.

Iomega now makes two Zips, SCSI and parallel. The much-awaited IDE version hasn't shipped. Non-Intel NT users will have to use the SCSI version (no plans for parallel drivers so far). The SCSI drive transfers data two to three times faster than the parallel version, but of course, your system has to have a SCSI controller.

If you choose a SCSI Zip, I strongly recommend letting NT's Disk Administrator see your Zip disks before you use them. Computer artist David Em had problems with his SCSI Zip dropping files. The problems disappeared after he learned just to let NT see the files. Don't reformat them, and especially don't reformat them as NT File System (NTFS), unless you use them only on NT.

The disadvantage of the parallel drive is that you can't move files to a Mac or Unix system. Of course, at $200 for either SCSI or parallel, the Zip drive is so cheap you can buy one of each. To move a huge file to a Mac--say for output to a high-end image setter--the Zip beats dialup transfer, and with modern system software, Macs can see DOS Zip disks directly. The Zip comes with guest software for DOS and Windows, which makes attaching to a customer's PC a two-minute operation, and no reboot is necessary.

A side note: The Zip represents a very large portion of Iomega's new business, yet I'm happy to report the company didn't abandon previous products such as Bernoulli drives. The Zip readmes say the same NT drivers work on many Iomega products without modification, so large corporations that have invested in this technology can continue to use it.

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