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vee-kayyesterday at 5:31 PM2 repliesview on HN

Yes! Superfloppy!

Iomega's awesome Zip drive disk (100MB, 250MB, 750MB capacities) , I think I still have a 250MB zip drive somewhere in my home attic.

They required a dedicated zip drive (took up same sized slot/bay as a floppy disk drive), but (if I recall right) that drive was backward compatible standard 3&1⁄2-inch 1.44MB floppy disks.

Interestingly, these drive also came in variants to work with different types of interfaces: IDE, ATAPI, USB, SCSI, FireWire.

Zip drives filled the portable storage niche, until CDs and DVDs replaced their need.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zip_drive

I found it cool that floppies and superfloppies had label stickers on which we can write (with a sketch pen) to remind the user of what content the disk is intended for.

There were some nice cameras that used Zip disks for storage! Very convenient for photographers working on multiple projects or sessions.

https://www.digitalkameramuseum.de/en/prototypes-rarities/it...


Replies

chungyyesterday at 7:31 PM

> They required a dedicated zip drive (took up same sized slot/bay as a floppy disk drive), but (if I recall right) that drive was backward compatible standard 3&1⁄2-inch 1.44MB floppy disks.

Zip was a completely unique physical format, and had no backwards compatibility with standard 3½" disks.

SuperDisk, on the other hand (in both the LS-120 and LS-240 variants) was backwards compatible with standard floppy disks in the same drive.

KellyCriterionyesterday at 7:32 PM

ZIP Drives died as Minidisc died: MD was a very proper medium, but the inventors made some wrong decissions