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Arrived a day before the expected day. In good new state. Installed effortless and works fine.
I've used the same disk since I bought the drive. I bought a Zip 250 over 3 years ago. It's always plugged in and runs quietly (sort of). I guess it's obsolete, now, what with flash drives and pocket hard drives, but it has its place in our house. I use it to quickly and automatically back up a few important files (lots of redundancy for these files). I don't have to do anything except delete the older files once in awhile. I hope it never gives out.
Our old Iomega died so this was a replacement so we can keep using our backed up data. It will be fine for that. The software provided is not compatible with Windows Vista; something not in the provided documentation. When I let Windows search for installation software, it was installed without a problem.
Falling prices for CD discs solve that problem. This model is treated as a USB Mass Storage Device so you must use Windows Me or later. A ZIP disk has no compatibility problems between different Windows systems and computers. Replaceable 250 MB ZIP disks provided vast storage in the past but are no longer the latest in storage technology.
The Model Number is ZIP250USBPCMBP. It has a rounded dark blue case and is powered by the USB port. The IOMEGA software should be installed on Windows 2000. Right click on the ZIP drive to select the Iomega "Format" function.
"Write Protection" protects against writing over data, a password can protect against both reading and writing files. You should select the icon to "Unplug or Eject Hardware" to remove this device. If the unit does not have an eject button on the drive you must select the EJECT command from the Properties menu. It is good to do this all the time because of the disk caching system. This unit is identified by its small size (4.5" wide, 7" long, 1" high) and light weight.
Use "Short Format" to delete all data on an Iomega disk. The "Long Format" repairs a drive with errors, converts from another format, or removes all passwords. You can also flag the ZIP drive as "non-removable" so it appears like a hard drive. The manual has the details.Computers have a limited number of IDE devices and drive bays so a separate storage device is practical. The fastest transfer is with an internal IDE ZIP device.The "User's Manual" warns against using the Operating System to copy a disk. It only operates horizontally. The 250 MB ZIP disk is less widely used than the 100 MB disk.
The 250 MB drives can read and write to 100 MB ZIP disks, but slower than with a 250 MB disk. Use the Iomega "Copy Machine" program. ZIP disks reuse deleted space unlike a CD whose space is consumed when you replace files. A CD written on one system may not be updated by a different system.You may find support for Win98 on the Internet for USB Mass Storage Devices.
No, amount of trying can get the thing to work. All my old files are still not accessible from the many Zip discs I used to use. What a waste of money.
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