

Imation superdisk connector drivers#
My test scenario showed the advantages and disadvantages of parallel port drives compared with PC Card devices.None of the test units was difficult to get up and running all three came with the necessary drivers and software. The other SuperDisk drive was designed for notebook computer use with a PC Card as an IDE and ATAPI controller.To compare them, I installed all three drives on a notebook.
Imation superdisk connector zip#
Potential new standards, including some that are backward-compatible with existing floppies, have been appearing as optional equipment on many systems.The GCN Lab recently took a look at the latest Zip 250MB drive from Iomega of Roy, Utah, and two SuperDisk drives from Imation of Oakdale, Minn.One SuperDisk drive attached to the test computer's parallel port, as the Zip drive did. Two exceptions were Iomega Corp.'s 1995 release of the 100M Zip drive and cartridge, and Imation Corp.'s 1997 release of the SuperDisk device.The Zip has not secured its position as heir apparent, however. To supplant the floppy, a replacement standard will have to be just as widely accepted.But the industry has devoted little attention to it because of the tight focus on faster processors and larger hard drives. Every computer with a 1.44M floppy drive can read and write to the same disk media'arguably the most successful example of standardization in PC history.


Even with no groundswell of support to protect its dominance, it has endured for a decade. By Jason ByrneGCN StaffOne of the oldest pieces of technology in PCs today is the 3.5-inch floppy drive.
