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Sunday November 22, 2009 3:40 AM AEST
Skip Navigation LinksPC Authority > News > Whatever happened to....Zip Disks?
Whatever happened to....Zip Disks?
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Whatever happened to....Zip Disks?

by Staff Writers  on Nov 6, 2009
Tags: zip | disks | hard | disks | dvd | usb | storage | cd | iomega | syquest
"FredT, you might be able to answer this - was the later "Click!" 40 MB drive named to exploit the bad press surrounding the Zip drive? Seemed like quite a coincidence! The Zip (and Jazz) were ..."
 
Zip drives were once the top choice for storage, well before DVDs and USB sticks gained in popularity. But whatever happened to this once mega-popular format and what sealed its demise?

There was a time when 500MB was a high-capacity hard drive, and it was during this era that Iomega's Zip drive shone.

Released in 1994, the Zip drive quickly became the most popular of all the super-floppy products, offering 100MB of removable storage and later 250MB.

However, when CD burners made it easy to store 650MB on a cheap disc that worked in nearly any computer, Zip drives began to lose their lustre.

Iomega fought back with the Jaz drive, which supported 1GB and 2GB discs, but it couldn't compete on cost.

Unlike the floppy disk's graceful slide into obsolescence, however, Zip drives would depart in infamy.

Unbeknown to most, Zip discs were prone to developing misaligned heads, rendering the data on the disc unreadable.

A drive searching for missing data would produce an ominous clicking sound, which quickly became known as the Click of Death, as it was a sure sign that a catastrophic loss of data was on its way.

Although competing products such as SparQ and SyQuest continued to bump up the storage, the arrival of USB drives and the ability to have huge capacities rattling around in the pocket pretty much put paid to the days of proprietary storage.

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Comments: 5
Thoughts on this article? Add a comment below.
petergaskin
Nov 6, 2009 8:27 PM
As stated in the article - the inability to get the data from the zip drive ultimately sealed the fete of zip drives. had experience with these drives at 2 different places - neither use this back up any more. You should now do an article on the sony dat backup drives. These drives are a dying breed - 12 gb of data is just too small for a backup drive. The backup media is too dear. The need to repair the disk drive - and the price, means that my solution of backing up to a pc and then zipping the back up to an external hard rive - 1tb - is a definite winner!


Comment made about the PC Authority article:
Whatever happened to....Zip Disks??
Zip drives were once the top choice for storage, well before DVDs and USB sticks gained in popularity. But whatever happened to this once mega-popular format and what sealed its demise?

What do you think? Join the discussion.
Slatts
Nov 6, 2009 9:09 PM
kiss of death
five fingers of death
blue screen of death
click of death
red ring of death

Got any more?
blockcentre
Nov 6, 2009 11:07 PM
ZIP Disks were certainly the go in their day. It was the backup medium of choice for many small businesses that really only needed to backup less than 50MB, such as MYOB files. I had many clients that swore by them.

Although CD's and DVD's could hold much more data, it was the flexibility of the ZIP that made it popular - it worked like a really, really, big Floppy Disk and was simple to backup to.

The USB flash drive is what started their downfall. Works in the same way, without the needing a ZIP drive and can hold LOTS more data.




FredT
Nov 7, 2009 5:19 AM
Some corrections and just to set the record straight comments. I worked on the development of the Zip drive and was familiar with some of these issues.

First, the click-of-death (COD) was not an inherent defect in the design of the Zip drive. The COD occurred when the read-write head of the Zip drive had it's suspension defomed due to shock. This would not only mis-align the head, but would also make the head not fly correctly (closely) on the Zip media. At one point in the life of the Zip drive a small foam bumper was removed from the acutator to save manufacturing costs. This foam bumper protect the head and it's suspension from being damaged during an uncontrolled removal of the head from the media (power removed from drive due to power failure or plug being pulled). Once this was discovered this foam bumper was replaced. It is my understanding that only a subset of Zip drives suffered from the COD. It was this group.

About interchangeability of media -- This actually was a strength of the Zip drive. Zip disks could be moved from Zip drive to zip drive and they just worked. CD & CDRW media, that did replace Zip, were notoriously poor at interchangeabilty of discs between drives. Too many different manufacturers I think was the basic problem. My estimate is that Zip disk with Zip drive interchangeability was >98% while at that time CD & CDRW interchangeability rate was < 60%.

Always good to see the Zip era remembered!
Kiwi_ME
Nov 7, 2009 8:39 AM
FredT, you might be able to answer this - was the later "Click!" 40 MB drive named to exploit the bad press surrounding the Zip drive? Seemed like quite a coincidence! The Zip (and Jazz) were embraced by graphic artists at the time but then dropped like a hot potato once the problems starting showing up. My GF was one such person and we spend much time trying to make disks read and figure out how to stop them from getting damaged. The rumor was that once a Zip disk was damaged it would further damage any drive it was used in. Once, after I complained about the reliability of Zips in a forum I received a polite but firm email from Iomega basically telling me to take my problems to them, not the public! Other fall-out from the Zip fiasco was the large number of refurbished drives seen on the shelf at Fry's Electronics.
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