home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Short: V1.4, Amiga Magneto-Optical Drive FAQ
- Author: mark_k@iname.com
- Uploader: mark_k@iname.com
- Type: docs/help
-
- Amiga Magneto-Optical (MO) Drive FAQ 1.4 (17-Jul-99)
-
- Copyright © 1998-1999 by Mark Knibbs
-
-
- Changes since version 1.3
- -------------------------
-
- 1.4 17-Jul-99, fifth public release
- · Updated media costs table.
- · Added mount files for 1.3GB 3½" and all types of 5¼" MO disks, and for
- 128MB 3½" Mac-formatted disks.
- · Added information about Philips' and Fujitsu's 1.3GB 3½" drives, which are
- now available.
- · Added patch for ShapeShifter 3.10 to allow booting from any device type.
- · Added to the List of Amiga MO Users section.
- · Mention 5¼" drive backward compatibility.
- · Write about A-Max 2.50 in Cross-Platform Access section.
- · Added links to pictures of MO disks in Types of MO Media section.
- · Mention Thomas Richter's SCSIFormat program.
- · Included Ralf Gruner's GPatch version 1.6 executable.
- · Added pictures of Philips' 640MB and 1.3GB drives.
- · Reversed order in Version History section so that more recent details are
- first.
- · Various other minor changes.
-
-
- Here are some extracts from the FAQ.
-
-
- Introduction
- ------------
- The Amiga Magneto-Optical Drive FAQ contains information about using magneto-
- optical (MO) disk drives with Amiga computers. It is freely distributable
- providing no changes are made.
-
- I hope the availability of this document will encourage more Amiga users to
- consider optical storage, instead of fragile magnetic media like Zip, Jaz and
- SyQuest.
-
-
- What are Magneto-Optical Disk Drives?
- -------------------------------------
- Magneto-optical ("MO") disk drives are versatile removable storage devices,
- which use very robust and inexpensive media. You can use an MO disk just like a
- large floppy disk, or like a hard disk.
-
- Magneto-Optical storage has many advantages over other types of removable media:
-
- · Media life is at least 30 years, which greatly exceeds the life of magnetic
- media like floppy disks, Zip and Jaz disks. Some manufacturers quote media
- life of 50 or even 100 years. Data can be rewritten at least a million
- times, and read at least 10 million times; some manufacturers quote figures
- ten times this. This figure also exceeds that for magnetic media.
-
- · There is no physical contact between disk surface and drive head, so there
- is no possibility of data loss through a head crash.
-
- · MO drives are backwardly compatible, which means that if you upgrade your
- drive in the future, you will be able to read and write all your existing
- disks on the new drive.
-
- · MO disks are not susceptible to magnetic fields.
-
- · If, for example, you spill a cup of coffee on an MO disk, you can clean the
- disk surface and continue to use the disk. Cleaning kits are available for
- both MO drives and disks. Disk cleaning kits are very cheap.
-
- · MO disks are simple in construction, unlike some other kinds of removable
- media which may contain moving parts. This is another reason why MO offers
- greater reliability than magnetic media.
-
- · MO disks are available in several different capacities, which vary in
- price. Cost per megabyte is lower than all other kinds of random access
- removable media.
-
- · Unlike Zip, Jaz, SyQuest etc., MO drives and disks are not proprietary, and
- they are made by many companies. The disks are covered by various
- international standards. So you will not be stuck if your drive
- manufacturer goes bust, as happened recently to SyQuest.
-
- · Compared to other forms of optical storage, there are no restrictions on
- writing and rewriting data to MO disks, unlike CD-R or CD-RW. Also unlike
- CD-R & CD-RW, since the disk itself is protected by a plastic casing, there
- is no danger of data corruption due to the disk getting scratched.
-
- · MO drives normally automatically verify written data to guarantee data
- integrity. There is no such verification with CD-R and CD-RW, so to be
- assured that the data has been written properly when using these, you would
- need to manually compare all copied files.
-
- · Magneto-optical technology is well-proven. I believe the first ISO standard
- 5¼" MO drives were released in 1989 or 1990, with 128MB 3½" MO drives
- becoming available in 1991. 640MB 3½" drives have been available since
- 1996. Originally MO was largely restricted to professional use due to high
- drive cost, but over the past couple of years this situation has changed.
-
- · MO disks are convenient, compact and easy to use. 3½" MO disks are the same
- size as two floppy disks stacked on top of each other. They have a
- write-protect tab which works just like a floppy disk's.
-