Zip, Buz, splat! More Iomega trouble


With its Zip drive click-and-die troubles barely behind it, Iomega has new product glitches and defects to contend with. First, the newer Zip Plus drive, which boasts the ability to connect to either a parallel or a SCSI port, may eat your data when connected to some SCSI bus configurations. Meanwhile, the company's popular Buz multimedia editing system turns out to be incompatible with quite a few computer systems and video boards; early models contain a defective chip; and that ain't all.

Zip Plus SCSI snafu. In theory, you can connect the Zip Plus drive to your computer's high-speed SCSI bus. Though the original packaging and documentation don't say so, you'd better not connect the drive using anything other than the included 25-pin AutoDetect cable. Don't use the drive in a daisy chain with other SCSI devices, or with SCSI cable adapters either. Otherwise, the company's Web site says, you may "compromise the integrity of your data".

So if your SCSI controller has the common 50-pin (SCSI 2) connector, or you use a PC Card SCSI controller in your laptop, connecting the Zip Plus to the SCSI bus could scramble your data. And according to Iomega, no error message will alert you to the data corruption. Likewise, if you have another external SCSI drive or a scanner connected in a daisy chain, you'll have to connect the Zip Plus drive to the computer's slower parallel port instead.

To find out more about ZipPlus system compatibility, or to request an updated manual, point your browser to www.iomega.com or phone Iomega's technical support on (02) 9925 7700.

Iomega recommendations for ZipPlus customers

Do

Don't

Use ZipPlus only as a stand-alone device on a 25-pin D-sub female SCSI connection or on a parallel port connection

Do not use any cable converter or gender changer when connecting the drive, either on the connection to the drive or to the computer

Always use ZipPlus with the Iomega blue AutoDetect cable included with every drive

Do not use ZipPlus with PowerBook or PC notebook SCSI connections

Early Buz, bad cuts. Initial versions of Iomega's Buz Multimedia Producer system contain a faulty chip that can prevent your system from booting up. Iomega says only a few early units contained the faulty chip, and ù according to Heidi Badgery of Iomega Australia ù no instances of the problem have been reported locally.

That's not the only problem that might affect Buz buyers, however. A "known issues" page on the company's Web site lists many common systems and video boards Buz doesn't like, resulting in poor audio and video quality and even system lockups. Greg Bartels, senior product line manager of Iomega's professional products Asia Pacific division, told PC World that system lockups mainly occurred on systems that were not fully PCI 2-compliant. He stressed that systems that were known to be incompatible with Buz were listed on the box.

Incompatible systems include all IBM Aptivas built before August 1997, Compaq's Presario 4850 and Deskpro XL 6150, Packard Bell's 869 CD and Platinum, Hewlett-Packard's Pavilion 7000 series and Vectra XA, and Gateway's P5-100. Iomega says Buz won't work at all with video boards based on the Cirrus Logic CL-GD5430 chip set, and remarks that "you may consider upgrading" boards based on the CL-GD5434, CL-GD5440, Trident 9440, Weitek P9001, Alliance Promotion, and ATI Mach64 chip sets.

The software that shipped with initial Buz boxes had problems, too. Video captured at 720 x 480 resolution displayed noticeable "jitter" during playback, and Buz couldn't capture SECAM-format (French) video signals, or still frames in RGB format. Appropriately, Windows 95's Device Manager reported the Buz driver version as "Beta Release 1". The 273KB Buz Drivers 1.2 update (ftp.iomega.com/pub/buzupdat.exe) rectifies all of these buglets. Be sure to read the important installation instructions first, at www.iomega.com/support/techs/buz/6040.html.

û Scott Spanbauer and Neville Clarkson


Category:Bugs and fixes
Issue: September 1998

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