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2IPDRIVE.TXT
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1996-07-14
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~Iomega Zip Drive
The Iomega Zip Drive, reviewed by Les Aston.
This Zip drive has to be the most useful add-on device for PC
computers, for a very long time. Until recently, the parallel port was
only used for printers. Now there are CD drives, hard drives, scanners
and cameras as well as Zip drives, all available. No need to open up
the case to fit yet another internal card.
The Zip drive itself is small, 7 inches by 5 inches and just over an
inch in thickness. It is intended to stand alongside the computer
case, on moulded rubber feet. The cable from the supplied mains unit
is concealed in a groove in the drives casing. On the rear of the
drive are 2, 25 pin connectors, one being connected to the computer
parallel port, the other a pass through connector for the printer. The
drive is supplied with one 100 megabyte disk. These are as thick as 2
normal 3.5 inch disks and slightly larger. The supplied disk has a
large collection of utility software, which provides every possible
item that may be needed. Disk protection is software controlled. Also
timeout functions are set from software. Copying, formatting, in fact
all the usual Dos utilities are supplied.
The price seems to have settled to £149 at most dealers, although PC
World was £179 and have just come down to £169. Disks bought in tens
cost £115 (13.51 per 100 meg. disk including VAT).
Each 100 meg disk is supplied in a strong plastic case (like a cross
between a CD case and a cassette case) so there is no need for special
boxes, in fact a 10 pack just has a band of thin card around it.
The drive can be set up by a line in the Autoexec file to come to life
on boot up, but it can also be called at any time by running a short
file called GUEST.EXE. The performance is excellent, the rate of
data transfer varies according to differences in parallel port cards.
Mine is one of the slowest and my own findings were :- time taken to
read in one megabyte, 10 seconds. To copy back that same file 12
seconds. To set this up, I created one file EXACTLY one meg. in
length, then I copied it 10 times to give 10, 1 meg files, which is
more realistic than one large file. These speeds are easily
doubled on more recent port cards.
The real advantage of this drive is its versatility. At last it is
easy to have an exact copy of a working system, rather than just a
back up. It DOES work perfectly with Norton Backup, getting 128 meg.
on the one Zip disk. All my music programs are on one disk, all games
other than adventures on one disk, the adventures get a disk to
themselves. To use the drive on a laptop, I leave the one cable
connected to the main computer and use another short cable from the
drive to the laptop. The cost (with 10 disks) is considerably more
than a 1 gig hard drive, but well worth it! Disk prices vary from £13
to £19.95 each, inclusive of VAT. Guess who charges the most?