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Re: [OM] Re: Syquest Sparq

Subject: Re: [OM] Re: Syquest Sparq
From: "John Petrush" <petrush@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Mon, 30 Nov 1998 19:52:21 -0800
Western Digital has been in the drive biz for a long time and they do it well.  
I have WD drives in all my computers and (knock on wood) never had a disk 
failure.  If you can break down and reassemble an OM-1, you can install a WD 
drive :).  They are not the fastest, or highest capacity, just good equipment 
at a fair price.

John P
______________________________________
there is no "never" - just long periods of "not yet".
there is no "always" - just long periods of "so far"

    -----Original Message-----
    From: John Hermanson <omtech@xxxxxxxxx>
    To: olympus@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx <olympus@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
    Date: Monday, November 30, 1998 3:33 PM
    Subject: Re: [OM] Re: Syquest Sparq
    
    
    Wow!  Thank you for all "dat" info.  Maybe I'll  just upgrade my hard 
drive.  Jees, 10.0 gig Western Digital for $259 or something like that and I've 
read that Western is one of the easiest to install & get running.  Now someone 
can answer this and tell me how bad Western Digital is! ;-) 
    John 

    Dave Haynie wrote: 

        On Mon, 30 Nov 1998 11:52:18 -0500, John Hermanson <omtech@xxxxxxxxx> 
jammed all night, and by sunrise was overheard remarking: 
        > The Syquest Sparq (1 gig backup disc system) 

        DANGER! DANGER WILL ROBINSON! DANGER! 

        > recently went on sale at local 
        > office supply stores for $49 (!) Down from the original price of 
$199. 

        Ouch! I bought one at $199 or thereabouts. This isn't really a backup 
        disc (well, folks do use them for backup, but it's among the most 
        expensive forms; tape and CD-R are each much cheaper), really just a 
        cartridge hard drive; you replace the cartridge, the heads stay with 
the 
        drive, like a CD or a floppy. It's nearly as fast as a standard EIDE 
        drive, and actually has special media streaming modes that make it 
        faster than the best EIDE of only a little while ago. It's essentially 
        the same drive technology as the SyJet, only with a more advanced media 
        (one platter, versus two for the SyJet, hence the lower prices). 

        > Has anyone heard if Syquest has been bought out by Iomega or Imation? 

        Nope. Last I heard, SyQuest is in dire straights, considering or having 
        files chaper 11 or some-such. Check out this one: 

             http://www.news.com/News/Item/0,4,28223,00.html?st.ne.fd.mdh 

        That's a little old, I suspect they're already in bankruptcy, but I 
        don't have a pointer to it. 

        Sadly, a quick perusal of a SparQ support list at 

            http://www.juip.com/sparqboard/sparqboard.html 

        shows that, if not most, quite a few SparQ users have found their 
drives 
        just up and die. It's also true that, several months after I got my 
        drive (lured in by the "3GB for $99" deal), they raised the price of 
the 
        discs, so now it's more like 2GB for $99. As it turns out, I don't have 
        enough invested in SparQ now to go any further with it, and while mine 
        still works, I would be worried to use it with the chance of failure 
        apparently so high and SyQuest apparently approaching defunctdom. 

        You're better off with something else. The main reason I didn't use my 
        SparQ much is that, with HD's so cheap anyway, I haven't recently had a 
        disc crunch (though I haven't had much time for music, which is where I 
        get the disc crunch -- digital photography hurts for awhile, but I 
        usually dump cleaned-up scans out to CD-R). Meanwhile, for data 
exchange, 
        it's email or ZIP, since everyone has a ZIP. IoMega apparently plans a 
        new ZIP for next year, which supports 250MB ($15.95 per disc) but also 
        reads the 100MB format. ZIP has been very reliable in my system, though 
        not fast enough for anything but archivals. 

        And there are others. It's almost crazy: 

                - Olympus and others back the ISO standard MO (magneto-optical) 
                discs, little floppy sized 3.5" discs. These, being optically 
                based, are (like CDs) immune to magnetic or x-ray radiation, 
and 
                they're generally more rugged than mechanical discs. You get 
                120MB or 230MB per disc, at near-hard-drive speeds. See 
                
http://www.olympusamerica.com/cgi-bin/section.cgi?name=storage&product=SYS_230 

                - SuperDrive, aka LS-120, this Imation thing which delivers a 
                super floppy with 120MB per disc, with standard 1.44MB support 
                as well. LS means laser-servo, these are optically positioned 
                with magnetic read/write heads. This is something of an 
emerging 
                standard, though ZIP is still more popular. These are faster 
                than floppies (you need that, obviously, for the size), but 
                slower than ZIPs. 

                - Sony 200MB floppy, coming Real Soon Now, is basically the 
same 
                idea as LS-120: it reads your old discs, works big with new 
                technology discs. It's not compatible with LS-120, of course. 

                - CD-R/CD-RW. Everyone should know what this is. You get 660MB 
                or so per disc; CD-RW discs are heading down to under $20 price 
                points, CD-Rs (write-once) are nearing the "cheap as sand" 
                category. Like CDs, they're not especially fast; in fact, the 
                heavier heads on CD-R/RW drives make those drives much slower 
                than modern CD-ROM drives. CD-Rs play in many CD-ROM and 
DVD-ROM 
                players, the formats are all standardized, etc. 

                - DVD-RAM, etc. This is the rewritable format of DVD, which you 
                would love, since it does 2.5GB or more per disc. 
Unfortunately, 
                you'd have to sell off a few Zuikos to afford one, still pricey 
but 
                dropping. And while DVD-ROM and DVD-R formats are stabalized  
there 
                are still a handful of rewriteable DVD formats (DVD-RAM, 
DVD-RW, 
                etc), each as incompatible as the next. Basically, the dust 
hasn't 
                settled here yet. 

        -- 
        Dave Haynie  | V.P. Technology, Met@box Infonet, AG |  
http://www.metabox.de 
        Be Dev #2024 | NB851 Powered! | Amiga 2000, 3000, 4000, PIOS One 
        

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