I always found SqQuests reliable but they always sounded like they were on the verge of rattling themselves apart. The distinctive sound of a rushed designer ejecting a still-spinning drive would probably trigger a stress reaction in me, even 25 years after I last heard it.
The look of that first Zip drive was a master stroke on Iomega's part IMHO. The Zip looked like a cool piece of consumer tech that you'd want to own, compared to the boring beige box look of the Syquest drives of the early-'90s.
Intresting the Zip drive was not the biggest, best or really anything at the time. There was also plenty of alternative that was smaller. What Zip had was a somewhat low price and a large marketing campaign. Of cause Syquest was never ment as a consumer product. There was a very small market for a portable media that expensive for consumers. While the original zip drive did sell well, with the Parallel port interface it was both clumsy and slow. yea sure, much faster than a floppy, but still fairly slow. IT was really when the IDE and later USB version was made that the sails spiked. Both considerably faster and less bulky, and more so cheaper. With a price tag of $200 and a bulky parralel interface, it might not be a hard sell, but a lot of people just didn´t buy it. When it dropped down to $100 (and below) and you could get it installed in the computer internally, it was a way simpler buy.
I started a graphic design business back in 1995 using nothing but a single Zip drive, a few cartridges, and some time in the University Mac labs where I was going to school. Today that business is an ad agency with 25 years under its belt doing a million dollars plus business annually. I couldn't have gotten it off the ground without my trusty Zip drive.
I remember using these regularly back in the day. My parents bought a 200mb one it to do backups for their business. I was given my own disk to keep my games and school stuff separate. My dad later had an EzDrive for his CAD machine. They were superior to ZIP, but yeah, the disks were expensive. CD burners ultimately killed both. Especially universal disc format, that let you treat a CD-RW like a mass storage device. You could get a whole stack of RWs for the price of a Zip Disk.
I still have a Fujitsu GigaMO 2.3GB magneto-optical drive that I use for storing financial records, due to the built-in error correction in the MO format. Also it gives me an excuse to use a MO drive.
@@deusexaethera Yea, that is a bit strange, there was load of MO format on the market, but it would seam like they really didn´t compete. Granted, they was quite a bit slower. But mostly so in search, if you where mostly storing data it really don´t matter that much. If sony wasn´t that stubern and market MD as a cheap desktop drive, it would probobly have won the market.
In the early ’90s I worked in an output service bureau in Vancouver. We had several workstation, mostly Macs, and at least one of every popular removable media drive. Each day I would pick a computer at which to get comfortable, grab a handful of dockets, and copy files over to the computer to start troubleshooting, load fonts, and prepare files for print. I started an hour before opening to start up computers, put the coffee on, and get the photo processors for the high resolution Linotronic imagesetters. This gave me my choice of computer, which I usually chose for location rather than model, and the change to hook up a removable drive option. At the time, 5.25" Syquest was still most popular, so I usually used that, based on what media the jobs in the physical drop box used. I would also distribute the other drives (Zip, Bernoulli, Fujitsu optical, 3.5" Syquest) to the other workstations so the other workers wouldn’t need to shut down to add them later. Inevitably my ambition to deal exclusively with one type of media would lose priority to the schedule of the day. A rush job would come in, I would be the next available operator (we called these NAO jobs), and I would have to grab that docket. Often that meant loading a different media. The official procedure was to either take over the workstation using that drive, have the operator of that workstation stop what they were doing and copy the files for me to a server, or shut down both systems to swap drives because you never hit swap SCSI devices. Guess which one we usually did? As far as I know, not swapping SCSI devices never was a problem. Eventually we devoted an older system to be the media reader. Five or so different drives were connected to one workstation and when you needed files from removable media you used that computer and complied them to your computer over the network. This added a new bottleneck as operators often had to wait for the system to be available. This led to my solution, which was about once every couple of hours someone would grab every upcoming job using removable media (they had a different coloured envelope) and copy them all to the computer’s hard drive. Later, the operator working on that job would copy the files to their workstation to prepare the output. No duplicate drives, no competition for devices, and no dangerous hot swapping or time consuming shut downs. What I remember about the different media is that Syquests were faster than the other, and had a satisfying click when the cartridge was properly seated in the drive. Fujitsu magneto optical was slowest but had high capacity and, being newer than the others, was rare. Zip, when it arrived, became very popular very quickly due to the low cost of both drives and cartridges. At the time 100 MB was squally enough, especially since we did a lot of the scanning for our customers and only supplied low res proxy files for scans. The high res files were already in the shop, so didn’t take up space on the cartridges. It wasn’t uncommon to get a job that required two or three Zips to load, but that was still cheaper than a 200 MB Syquest drive and cartridge and wasn’t nearly as inconvenient as the old low budget solution - a shoebox full of floppies. In the end I remember removable media became almost a non issue. Zip and built in optical drives (CD ROM and DVD ROM) were the last hurrah if physical media. Most jobs came in through the internet via FTP. Most of our clients were professional designers and had high speed internet. Those that didn’t tended to have smaller, simpler files that could transfer via dial up. I ended up taking some of the drives home when we dumbed them. I used a 2.5" Syquest (not the EZ Drive) for backups for a while, until I bought a DVD burner, and that was the last I saw of removable cartridges. It remind be of the early to mid 1980s, when there were so many competing computer platforms and it wasn’t obvious that only two would survive.
No data formats survive if you extend the timeframe long enough. I still have a Fujitsu GigaMO 2.3GB magneto-optical drive that I use for storing financial records, due to the built-in error correction in the MO format. Also it gives me an excuse to use a MO drive.
Awesome to hear about how it was on the inside. Thanks for sharing. :) Signed, Someone who would drop off 270MB Syquest drives at a service bureau for Linotronic output.
I use an SQ3270 drive as backup storage for my vintage Mac's. Quite a reliable drive. SyQuest's 3.5" format before the EZDrive. Ironically, a single cartridge holds more than most of the internal hard drives of the Mac's in my collection.
I worked in a small desktop publishing company. I persuaded my boss to invest in SyQuest drives as we were still using floppy disks to back up all our work. I only ever had one failure of a SyQuest drive, it was an 88mb one in adbout 1995. I found them extremely useful. Never really used zip disks at all. Very good video!
The "Winchester" style drives were pretty common in the mainframes in the 1970s, which had huge 10" or even 12" platters which could be removed and stored in cartridges which resembed pizza boxes. Most of them were top loading instead of front loading though.
I remember these things. They were all over the DTP industry and they were more often than not laden with viruses because they were passed around dozens of repro, design houses and printers. Yes, Macs had viruses.
Ha! I remember the good old days of blocking out an hour or two to wipe/reformat removable discs on a fairly regular basis. Norton Utilities was a good friend back then.
I loved the clamshell cases that the 44's and 88's were stored in. For years I opened up 5-10 per day, processing files for our designer clients. The cases had kind of a snug fit when they closed so they made this "pop" sound when you pried them open; I still remember that sound :)
I remember clients were very zealous about getting their SyQuest back, too. They'd have labels and asset tags and often custom branded clamshells. Zip disks usually would just have a business card and maybe a directory printout thrown in.
Very accurate and interesting video. You did your research. I worked at Iomega for 12 years and was on the development team for the Zip drive. At the time I was managing technical support and it was our idea to put a window on the drive. It was also support data gathered from our CRM system that led to the design to be idiot proof. The Zip drive could only be plugged in one way and the setup was super simple. The manual was just a fold out cartoon. I remember during a company meeting when Kim Edwards, then CEO, announced one of the top 10 objectives for the year was to put Syquest out of business. We all thought that took a lot of balls but he did it. Since the Zip drive required less and easier support than the Bernoulli drives did, it was decided to get rid of the toll free support number and outsource support. Hence, I was laid off but not after I got a nice severance package. I also sold a lot stock that I'd purchased for $1.00 or $1.25 per share for $49 a share. I made a lot of money and a few months later the stock tanked because the market realized it was over-valued. About a year ago I tried to sell my Zip and Bernoulli drives and cartridges but got no interest so I threw them all away. They are just too big and bulky compared to USB storage and cloud storage. I heard a while back that Tony Radman, the guy who invented the Bernoulli drive, passed away in 2012. I knew him well and he was a really good human being - and brilliant. Keep up the great work on you videos.
Back in the day - Zip just seemed to be absolutely everywhere - all systems *had* to have one in - at my school, all the mac's had them, about 20% of the PC's had the Zip drives built in, too. Then CD-R's became a thing and then Zip and Jaz just faded away, almost overnight. If you ever want to delve into Magneto Optical stuff, I can send you a drive and some media to try out :)
oh the Zip drive became some common because of what it really did - it gave us reasonably fast, reasonably cheap, reasonably large disks in an era where 1.44 MB just wasn't enough for anything other than a Unix online install disk, etc. I was an early adopter and made sure to get the SCSI version, despite the fact that I had to pay an extra hundred bucks for the controller card - sadly a few friends didn't bother to read the specs and got themselves the parallel version. One actually stuck with that version, even after seeing how mine performed. The parallel version was like a read/write tape drive without all of the retensioning, etc - super slow. The SCSI version was a slightly slow hard disk with a low seek time - but for that era, that was enough. I used to bring mine into the Mac lab and booted via the Zip drive - it ran just fine, even running Photoshop, etc. Frankly, it was almost as good as the SyQuest drives that we had in a few labs (and I still have an 88MB cart around still), and media was 20 bucks a pop or less, not 50 or more. :D When the IDE/ATAPI version showed up, no shock it became a standard feature for a few years there.
I forgot to add my comments about early CD-ROM burners, as it was a completely different experience than people have now. In '96 or so a group of my friends pooled money to buy a quad speed burner - a Yamaha (the best brand at the time). It was a SCSI unit, and you had to insert the CD into a caddy vs having a slide tray like modern drives (when you still see them lol). This quad speed burner cost US$1200, and blank disks were $12 a pop on our first order - it went down to $8 each on second order and kept dropping until it was about $4 a disc for a while - then a few years later the 30-packs started showing up at office supply stores and Best Buy and the price hit the buck each we paid for most of that era. Burning a disc was understood to be the sole activity of the PC until it was completed - all other software (including most systray apps) was shut down and you might even disconnect the ethernet cable just to be sure nothing would trigger some app from launching at the wrong time... for you see, once you begin writing a CD-ROM session, you must complete it without running out of data to write, or the whole burn fails. This was a real concern even when using a relatively pimped out machine for the era... "buffer underrun" was the thing to be worried about, and all of the burner software prominently displayed how much data was in the buffer - any time it got low, you got worried, and when it was mostly full you could relax a bit. We had many coasters in that first year... 12 bucks a pop for the initial ones, for poor ass college students who just wanted some warez... :D Luckily these days the bus can transfer much more data, and drives can copy much faster, and SSDs don't ever have to wait for a head to move or a platter to spin... but in the mid 90s, you could either get a winning CD that became an awesome tool, or some place to set down your can of pop and not get the table wet.
Man, I love your content. Your videos are excellent, great quality, montage, playing with focus change on scenes, lots of interesting information - just amazing. I am still using ZIP disks with my samplers but never heard about systems which you showed up. Thank you!,, it was a great journey!
Despite being a technology nerd, I don't think I've ever heard of this. I never had a ZipDisk but the Click of Death seemed more ubiquitous than you made it seem here, as it also had the "disks affected pass on the click to other drives" failing.
I think it might be the other way around -- the Internet has made Click of Death out to be more than it really was. I remember hearing about it a couple years after I no longer cared much about ZIP disks. Mine had always been fine, and everyone I knew that used them were fine, too. (Although I didn't know heaps of people using them.) I would imagine it would be different if you were a member of an institution where they were heavily deployed. Like a school or office that relied on them for daily operations. I did end up using Orb disks for one class I took in Uni, but other than that, it was basically floppy or CD for information interchange. I was never in a position where one person with a shredded disk would just start taking out drives, and having the problem escalate from there. I think that experience would likely change one's perspective of the failure rate. EDIT: Just wanted to add, I have gotten into retro stuffs in the last few years and now have maybe a dozen ZIP drives -- internal ATA and SCSI, external SCSI and parallel. No issues, other than acquiring a couple DOA drives that never worked at all, for one reason or another.
@@nickwallette6201 On the contrary. We used them at my former employer. Click of Death was ubiquitous. Even worse, you could get "disk clap" where one failing drie would affect the mechanism of a disk, which would then damage the mechanism of a "clean" drive when inserted into it. We went through DOZENS of drives on one government system we were trying to qualify.
@@dennisp.2147 Yeah, I'm familiar with the failure mode: If a disk had damaged media, it would snag the heads of a working drive, and either misalign them or rip them off completely. That drive would then damage the media on any inserted disks, and so on. It's a bit of a house-of-cards situation, which is what I was saying previously about this being widespread in any shared-use institution. It would take out a lot of drives in the area of influence of that patient-zero disk, and spread from there. But, if you had a single drive at home that you used with only your media, the chances of this problem happening to you seem fairly low. You would have to be the Patient Zero Disk owner. Apparently later models weren't quite as robust, having been cost-cut more, and thus failing more often, when Iomega succumbed to the same market realities that had taken out all of their competitors: Third-party media, hardware cost pressure, and rewritable optical drives and solid-state media.
@@nickwallette6201 It was bad enough that the Fortune 500 company that I worked for banned their use on any in-house systems and their inclusion in any designs for clients. Hardly what I would call isolated.
@@dennisp.2147 Well, again, I think that depends on how it's used. The idea of (relatively) high-speed, high-precision, close-tolerance removable magnetic media was probably doomed from the start because of the potential for widespread damage. BUT, it seems like there were hot spots of cascading failures, and then a lot of individuals who used them with carefully-handled disks, and never had an issue. In that sense, the perceived scope of the phenomenon itself varies wildly by your proximity to a cascade of failures. There are a lot of us out there who used them for years, and have nothing but fond memories. And now I use a whole fleet of them to carry larger files between my retro computers, nearly all used, and they're all fine save for one that never showed up on the ATA bus, and another that wouldn't write reliably. So yes. I think it's entirely possible the problem is exaggerated. When it happens, it's bad, and it's potentially widespread. But if you never have a disk with badly defective media, you could probably go your whole life without any trouble.
I absolutely loved SyQuest drives. Had quite a few back in the day, both a 5.25" 88 MB unit installed in an external SCSI case for my Macs and an internal 3.5" SyQuest EZdrive mounted in my PC. I really did not like Zip disks. The disks themselves just seemed a bit more delicate than SyQuest cartridges. I never had any of the often-talked-about reliability issues with SyQuest drives. And yes, I will freely admit that Zip disks didn't sound as "cool" to me as SyQuest drives. I just loved the "clunk" of engaging the drive lock lever, the whirring noise as the disk came up to speed, the clickety-clack sound as you accessed data on the disk, the reverse whirr as the drive spun down, and the clunk of ejecting the disk. Very hard drive like. Zip disks just sounded too plain and "floppy-like" to me. :) Iomega at least redeemed themselves in my eyes with the Jaz drive. Not only did it have incredible capacity for the time, but it brought back most of those lovely whirr-clickety-clack drive noises. :)
I remember when Zips came out, and I had one of the first drives out of anyone I knew. I used to bring the drive, and the disk to my local Image Bureau (remember those) to get my films produced to make printing plates. They were so impressed that they bought a drive themselves... Those were the days!
I am surprised you didn't mention the original 3.5" Syquest removable drives that succeeded their 5.25" drives which had capacities of 105MB and 270MB on each cartridge. When the Zip came out, the Syquest 105MB removable drive cost $300 and 105MB carts cost $50 each. As you can imagine, the 105MB drive was dropped like a hot potato immediately. This finally drove SyQuest R&D into high gear to catch up in the price war with Iomega. One BIG problem with the Zip drives not mentioned here was the fact that they cut corners not just on their reliability, but also in compatibility. Even though the SCSI version was marketed as a SCSI drive, Iomega removed a number of standard SCSI features such as parity, and fixed SCSI IDs that made some SCSI devices incompatible with it. The Zip forced parity and only allowed SCSI IDs 5 and 6, which made them frustrating to set up and use. This was false advertising on Iomega at their best. To make it worse, when engineers dissected the Zip, they said all Iomega had to do was add a component that costed about 5 cents to the circuit board to fix these deficiencies. If Iomega was SO cheap to cut corners that much, I knew reliability issues were going to pop up. My prediction was spot on. The result was the "Click of Death". Of course, great marketing easily covered these defects up to the average consumer, so Iomega didn't care as long as they got the $$$. Otherwise, great video on Syquest's history. I had the 44MB, 200MB, 270MB models and all were and still are reliable. I just tried out my 200MB and 270MB drives on my Atari ST and both work like a champ.
I know several people who used Zip disks daily for the better part of a decade and none of them ever experience the Click of Death. As with most problems, its frequency of occurrence was greatly exaggerated by angry people who had the bad luck to experience it. Iomega may have cut corners, but they cut corners in ways that didn't affect 99.9% of users.
I also noticed that he left out the 105Mb and the 270Mb SyQuest drives. I had one of these drives and I used it quite a lot with many cartridges, with only one 105Mb drive failing. When the zip 100 first came out, I was very impressed. Shortly after, I heard about the 'Click Of Death' and bought the SyQuest solution instead. I sold a lot of all the used drives and cartridges during the 2000s, and had very little issues with the SyQuest drives/media, as well as the Jaz drives/media. I used to shudder every time a customer would bring in a zip drive and stated "It's clicking a lot, and I have all these disks to recover..."
Love your videos on the competition between Syquest and Iomega. I'm always fascinated by the use of these computer data storage mediums from the late 1980s to 1990s.
I worked at both SyQuest and Castlewood throughout both their history. I have very fond memories of both companies but also experienced the sadness of being part of the downhill spirals of each.
I remember when the Zip drives killed floppies because of their increased capacity, and than later the USB flash drive killed the Zip drive because of capacity and the fact that no other hardware was needed because the computers started coming with USB ports.
We had a computer that used SyQuest cartridges in my elementary school, it was used for storing programs because the Macintosh didn’t have enough memory. Once Zip disks came out, that’s when our school replaced them. Zip Disks were lighter and were more portable!
Oh man, just the thought of the name "Sparq" still gives me chills. I had gone through 3 drives and 5 disks with first hand experience of data corruption and drive failures. The first drive had a head crash, accompanied by a dreadful grinding noise and resulting in a damaged starter disk. You could actually see the head element hanging off the arm by a thin wire inside. Once the second drive was damaged by the same disk, that's how I learnt about cross-drive damage via bad disks the hard way. It took some years later, a 3rd drive off ebay and some good luck rituals to recover the data from all the disks, including the damaged one, and never used them since. Ah, but back in the days of Napster downloads before having access to a CD burner, it was a neat thing for a while, though it taught me a valuable lesson not to place all your eggs in one basket (disk) and to back up regularly.
@@tulippasta Iomega's Zip drives had that problem with bad disks damaging read/write heads, which in turn damaged other disks read in that same drive.
I have been there too. I had an external and internal SparQ. The ATAPI drive died quickly and the external SparQ just chewed up drive after drive or refused to read them. I was really tempted by the Orb after seeing adverts everywhere but the SparQ ended up burning a real hole in my wallet and I'm glad in retropspect that I forwent the shonky Castlewood product. I now have SCSI Zip and Jaz drives for my vintage computers and those have held up fine. I had forgotten. how noisy these drives all were though. I thought the Jaz drive was performing a SparQ tribute act when I first powered it up with a disk in until I realised that it was just things were back then.
I liked iOmega Zip for a while in college, but over time they started to have serious reliability issues for me, to the point where I stopped using the drives and discs altogether. The kicker was when a website that I had designed was completely lost on a dead disk.
3:00 huh, funny enough, the last time I saw floppy drives in active daily use (outside the retro sphere) was when I visited a printing press facility. They said that nothing beats a floppy drive to hold printer settings and color parameters and can stay in the client folder (the paper one). (I guess upgrading a press that is the size of a bus also contribute to the decision)
I love the videos about computer-related history. I used 3 1/2 floppy disk as a kid, but I've never heard about SyQuest and Iomega products, later on, I just started using CD's
When I was in middle school, I remember saving up my money to buy a 100MB Zip Drive so I could store all the websites, photos, and games on the "big" disks when all I had was floppies. When my Dad got a CD burner, it was such a change. CD-RW disks were unreliable, but you could store so much more. I ended up saving my money to buy my own CD burner once I was building my own computers from other people's old parts. After helping build a wireless internet provider with a single 1.5Mbps T1 and having "high speed" internet at home, CDs were all we used. Now 128GB is under $50 on a reliable flash drive. Or I can easily just upload files with Starlink and a "free" service like OneDrive to share or move files around.
I worked at SyQuest during the very end. Ed Harper held an all hands meeting to give the "The rumors about things being are bad are true but there's still hope so please don't quit yet speech." This was after the previous quarter where the 10-Q said that if they didn't get funding that quarter, they would "no longer be an ongoing concern". Afterwards there was a "not going out of business sale" where employees could buy office equipment. But no! Not going out of business. During the meeting, Ed when on and on how nobody told him there was quality issues. I don't know if that was true or not, but the guy whose job it was to tell him most certainly knew. Marketing also knew the end was near. They started treating trade shows as parties for themselves and not clients. Contracting agencies started getting bad checks. The C suite didn't tell agencies, the contractors, or even their own employees about this. The contractors just got a call from the agencies saying the checked bounced and to go home. Their reports ran to accounting begging for something to be done. Some of them were pretty high up and had no idea that the end was near. Carole King had the master of her new album on a SyQuest. Oops. At the very end they were trying to release the 4.7GB Rocket. It was just a cluster fck. Everybody that knew what was coming in the back door or had an ear in tech support or sales knew it was dead man walking. Except for Ed Harper.
I'd never gotten into any of these formats back in the day. Went from floppy disks to CD-Rs to DVD-Rs to thumb drives to external hard drives. But I did pick up a zip 100 drive back a few years ago at a thrift store just out of curiosity.
I had a Zip drive, Jaz *and* a Sparq (at different times). The Zip worked well for me but I just didn't need it - it wasn't enough capacity for archiving, and I didn't ever have a need to transport 100MB worth of files around. The Jaz and Sparq I thought could be useful because the cartridges were so massive and cheap, so I could buy multiples and use them as backups or archives. But both ended up failing on me - I can't remember if it was the cartridges or drives or both, but ultimately it didn't matter. The tech just wasn't reliable and I ended up stopping use of both drives after buying only my initial cartridge for each. Just moved on to CD-R afterwards, which was a downgrade in capacity but the size of the discs meant I could store a bunch in a smaller space. And CD-R's were reliable and cheaper. I still have basically all of my CD-R archives from that era and they all still work (as far as I know, but I do grab something off them every now and then).
Excellent video!! I had no idea about the Sparq and Orb media. I remember seeing ZIP disks at a friends house and was in complete envy seeing him move around large files with ease and such small portability. At the time I was in college and couldn't afford one but wanted one so badly. I remember going through 2 zip drives and them both eventually failing. Long live CD/DVD drives!
I never heard of SyQuest drives until the Futuristic Sex Robotz released their song Back in the Day, where they mentioned the drives in passing. Now, I can see why SyQuest and Zip drives are gone. Why settle for inferior technology when we have USB flash drives, external hard drives, SD cards, and the Internet to store stuff? Even optical discs are far better than what SyQuest and Iomega pushed.
Having been through the twin misery of zip disks that worked until they didn't, and CDs that could probably only be read in the drive that burned them, I feel we are truly blessed these days by high capacity USB sticks.
Funny you should mention USB sticks. Besides my years at Iomega, I worked on one of the first USB flash drives ('stick'). I wonder if anyone has ever heard of the company - Agate (failed flash in pan).
I used to own a SparQ, I think it was around 1998. I can confirm the damage issue. It was like a form of hardware virus... by the moment I realized what was going on, I had the drive replaced 2 times under warranty (must have cost a fortune to SyQuest) and lost several disks, with all its data, and quickly lost interest in the format. Hard drives also got significant increases in capacity which helped making such solutions less useful to individuals, and soon enough CD-burners started becoming affordable and popular, too.
They were also killed by horrible reliability issues. I only had a couple of the 1gb discs and they both developed unrecoverable corrupted sectors that lost or damaged files, with minimal use, primarily as backup.
@@maroon9273 Yeah, absolutely. I got my first computer in early '99 and there was definitely a need at that time. I had the option of a built-in Zip 100 or a CD-RW as the second drive, I took the Zip Drive due to how awful early CD burners were.
Still have my SparQ drive. Only ever had 3 cartridges though, the starter and 2 blanks. I never even used it that much when it was relevant, mainly just to back up stuff. I do recall have issues with at least one of the cartridges, but its been so long I can't remember specifics. I think I got it on the tail end of it being relevant and as this video mentions, CD burners were right there within a year and way more reliable. As a side note, I also recall a buddy using Stacker to fit 40MB on a 1.44MB floppy, was about as reliable as it sounds lol.
At my work we had Sparq drives and they were fast enough that we could run Diablo 2 directly from them. So when work was slow, out came the diablo sparq disks.
I will never forget it. I got totally screwed by Syquest after being loyal for years. I started with the 44meg removable drives. I had the final version of their removable media, a drive and lots of disks, tons of issues. They promised to replace or fix everything if I shipped it to them. A few weeks later they filed bankruptcy and I ended up with NOTHING. They literally had me ship everything I had to them with no intention of repairing or replacing but to use as leverage in the Bankruptcy...a final F you so a loyal customer. I still remember that guys voice I was dealing with, it was a lesson learned for sure.
Thanks for reminding me of the one piece of computer equipment I'd gladly take a sledgehammer to. Outrageously expensive discs, data failures and a whole lot I've forgotten about. And the failures happened in pretty well in a lab setting. God I hate those damn things, a frustrating nuisance from the start.
I still have my Syquest EZ drive backup drive and some cartridges. It was a great way to save audio files and mix info from ProTools. Those were the days when you recorded to SCSI drives that were super expensive for massive (for then) storage. When the ZIP drive came on the market I picked that up as well. It's stored in the same briefcase so they co-exist but I haven't used either for over a decade. Then I bought a Syjet ... Thank goodness for flash drives, CD and DVD for backup storage. And of course don't forget the Colorado Tape Backup System that were for sale during the this era.
Amazing video, thanks for about that. I must to confess I had a quite different experience, I had two ZIP drives and both suffered with the "click of dead", I definitively lost a lot of data. I decided to buy a SyQuest SyJet. This unit never had an issue, and in fact, still working with a pretty old computer I have for romance. Lol. Thanks so much for the video.
These videos make me sad and nostalgic about those times. I owned every gadget and format available at the time, including tape drives. And I really miss them all. They never failed on me. I even had a DLT 7000 for Mastering DVD on tape to send over to DVD plants around the world for mass production. I always took proper care of my equipment and 15 years ago thought on opening a computer museum but while on a trip I had my house robbed. The thieves emptied it and even stole my car. I was left with the clothes I had and my backpack. Damn. I really miss all I collected during 40 years.
What a blast from the past! I was amazed to see a PLI logo early in the vid; I sold a lot of that brand back in the early days of Mac. I also both sold and used a lot of Syquest 44s & 88s, 100 MB Zips and 1 GB Jaz drives and disks. I still have both drives and disks for Syquest 44s, Zip 100s and Jaz 1GBs. The Zips were my favorites for cheap, convenient transfers, but the Syquest and Jaz were a lot more usable for active working storage due to their speed.
Great video. This was the big format war when I was just getting into computers. I had a Syqest 88c on my first computer, a Mac IIsi. We used them as an external hard drive. The impact of the first Zip disks on the market was massive. Equally as impactful as FireWire Drives years later.
Syquest was awesome at the time. Among Mac users, in my area at least, the EZ 135 was extremely popular. I still have a load of disks and my drives. While they didn't touch the numbers of the ZIP disk they were faster and cooler.
Great video. Back in the 90's, I had a SyQuest EZ 135 drive, a Zip drive, and an Orb drive. I didn't realize how quickly SyQuest went out of business. By late 2000, I had purchased a CD burner. CD-R and CD-RW discs were cheap. CD burners definitely killed the types of removable media featured in the video. By 2004, I had purchased a DVD burner, and started buying USB flash drives. For the last decade, USB flash drives and the small 2.5" portable hard drives (powered by entirely USB) have been my choice of removable media. I currently use a 2TB 2.5" USB 3.0 hard drive for offline backups. It gets stored in a fire safe.
I remember using SyQuest drives back in the early nineties...for software development...specifically for replicating an entire software source tree so all files where portable and available....worked well for a while then I got burned hard by reliability issues...and since the client paid for the hardware and media, I was blamed for the failures...for they had none...I sent all 3 replacements back to them...and gave up on the format...they could not make the stuff work either. After that I avoided anything similar...and embraced laptops for a time.
These things were magical, I worked for an ad agency and we used to rush these Syquest in the newspaper and it was amazing for the time. The Syquests were gold
Amazing mini documentary, thanks a lot, Colin! 💜 This got my wondering if my Zip and SyQuest disks will still be readable after being untouched for approximately 25 years :-)
Zip disks still are. I sometimes have cause to move data from a legacy G3 system too old to use USB jump drives to a newer machine, and I have a USB-cabled 250 Zip drive that does that work for me. (Curiously, none of my Jaz disks still work, but that could be because I have a failed mechanism.)
I had a few Syquest portable and external Hard Drives in the Late 80s & early 90s. They were reliable and not prone to break down, but the zip drives sure killed that company off. Thanks for bringing back those memories. 👍🏽
Now there's a blast from the past! When studying for my multimedia degree in the late 90s, the university used SyQuest drives so students can save their files as floppy disks were just too small. The reputation of the SyQuests drives wasn't good: highly unreliable. Some of us, including me, moved to Iomega ZIP 100 and never had a failure. When I got my first job, I convinced my employer to get them and never looked back. We eventually upgraded to Iomega Jaz, but these discs WERE unreliable, we ditched them for the 750MB ZIP. Eventually, we started to use network storage as it was more cost-effective. I have fond memories of ZIP, a total lifesaver.
I remember the Zip Disk. It was a dream to be able to store so much data for a so reasonable price. I loved the Zip Disk! I very nice video, as a always. Thanks!
I can still hear the sound of a Syquest 44mb spinning up and mounting, and the sound of pushing the little button to spin it down before pulling the lever to eject it. Very tactile format :) The Zip eject mechanism always struck me as slightly violent. They came out so suddenly that I was constantly surprised they didn't shoot across the room. Although Iomega's Zip/Jaz products eventually were obsoleted by CD burners and flash drives, it should be noted that Iomega made blank CDs and USB flash drives. If you can't beat 'em, join 'em.
I still have my EZ135 drive. It worked well for the time, and the speed over the Zip was appreciated. You missed out on the whole Zip drive "Click of death" though, where similar to what you mentioned on other drive products, a dodgy disk could ruin a drive, and that drive would further ruin disks. And in an academic environment with lots of students, lots of Zip drives and lots of Zip disks, the result was nasty!
What I remember about Zip marketing was how sterile the setup looked. There was a computer on a desk next to a Zip drive on its side with the light on, but no sign of a cable. In reality the drive used a very thick and stiff SCSI or serial cable. The cable was stubborn and often made it difficult to orient the very light and flimsy drive the way you wanted it. I felt the marketing was misleading by hiding the ugly bulky cable in the ads. Search for Zip drive ads and you’ll see what I mean. Not only is the cable nowhere to be seen, the desk has no obvious cable pass though.
@@scottfalkner8013 Nobody else had anything better at the time, though. You knew it was going to be a SCSI cable or a parallel cable (which was essentially the same, with a different connector on one end) because that's all there was. Then USB came out, and they moved to that. It may have been "optimistic" marketing, but if you knew anything about computers at all, you can't have been surprised. I had a nice, super-flexible Belkin parallel cable for mine at the time. It was about as nice as an external peripheral could be.
I remember my brother bought into the EZ135 format and later regretted it. Computer / office supply stores must have been cluttered with all those different media formats... and users frustrated if they did not have in stock the exact one you needed.
WOW I loved this video, I used a few of these formats over the years. Mainly the Iomega ZIP and Jazz. I used Iomega Ditto tape storage at a job I had back in the late 90's.
Working at a printing pre-press shop at the time I ran into almost all of these media types. We had to be able to receive whatever the customer was sending. Mostly Zip disks, Jaz becoming more prevalent later as image sizes increased. Very few SyQuest 44/88 disks, but we had the drive around. Eventually was almost entirely CD based. Very cheap and almost every machine came with a drive preinstalled.
I had friends who designed rave fliers in 91-92 and I remember they were always complaining about how hard it was to get their Syquest discs back from service bureaus. Theywere a significant investment for a freelancer in those days and completely indispensable, there was no other way to get 44MB of data to a printer.
I was so happy to watch this video because I was a Apple computer use in the 1990s and used some of these formats. It was always confusing as to why there were so many. Now I know. I still have a 100meg Zip drive but only in storage.
Not technically a reason for syquest's failure, but my feeling is that the timing of the ZIP and the IMAC made the Zip disks REALLY popular for imac users. It almost felt like a forgone conclusion back in the days of the first Imacs. You'd either buy a Zip drive, or an LS 120 drive with your new imac
I rem back in the day i had a Zip SCSI Drive i used to back up my music productions and samples . Was awesome . Hadnt thought about this stuff in Years . Thanks for the refresher mate . Cheers
I picked up a Syquest external drive and a couple of disk for $10 total at a swampmeet a year ago. I remembered using that a while back and that brings back memories of the good old days of floppies and zip disks.
Interesting video, thanks. As an engineer I worked at Iomega on Bernoulli, Zip, and Jaz. So I was in the middle of much of this. I still have an assortment of mostly useless iomega devices. Good job on the video.
I guess another selling point was the fact that Zip drives where available in 4 different interface options - SCSI, USB, ATAPI/IDE and parallel port. I don't recall SyQuest drives being available in any other interface other than SCSI. They also appeared to be very cheap to produce compared to the heavy SyQuest drives.
I still have two models in my basement. They were brilliant. SO much faster and more reliable than Zip drives. I would argue about performance for Zip and Jazz drives. They were mechanically very fragile - in our labs they had a horrific fail rate.
This takes me way back. I worked at Convergent Technologies on the Megaframe. We used SyQuest as a backup solution. The main problem was that the disks forgot data. You would leave them on the shelf over night and a large portion of the data would be lost the next day.
I certainly remember using ZIP100 drives. I also remember two of them failing (one internal and one external) with the infamous "Click of Death". At that point I switched to CD-R drives and took the Iomega units to the local dump!
I had an internal EZ135 (IDE), that was bought brand new. It was already defective out of the box, so they told me to send it back and I received another one. Then the first disk that I bought didn't work, so I took the disk back to the store and it seems that this was also a common issue, according to their comments. So much for quality control and reliability. Shortly after, I bought a Zip drive and as far as I can remember, I think I only ever experienced one bad disk, among the 3-4 dozens that I ended up owning. I probably still have that EZ135 stored somewhere...
This was definitely a contender. My family adopted the Zip and then Jaz drive. Jaz drives were great, although they were best kept on a desk. We used it for months before we read the label saying "do not place on it's side".
In Jan. 1997 I was 15 and obsessed with computers. My family happened to be in San Francisco and we drove by Moscone Center where I saw banners proclaiming that MacWorld Expo was happening. I quickly made a handwritten sign reading "SPARE MACWORLD PASS?" I only stood outside for 5-10 minutes before a kind woman in a business suit gave me her pass and said "tell anyone who questions you that I'm your mom!" I went in and spent a joyful day exploring the exhibit hall. Of the many memories I took away (including getting to use a 20th Anniversary Mac which was later given to Steve Wozniak as a token of appreciation!), one of my best was visiting the Iomega booth. I had previously stopped at a booth showing removable-disk drives (I suspect it was a SyQuest booth but can't be certain), and the people working that booth were utterly standoffish to me - obviously not interested in wasting their time on some random kid. By contrast, the folks at the Iomega booth *lit up* when I stopped by, and treated me a like a guest of honor. By the time I left their area, I was carrying two large bags of swag - tee-shirts, buttons, stickers, basically anything they could think to give me. Maybe they just didn't want to deal with packing all that stuff up (this was the last day of the show), but they made me feel so special, and I never forgot it. I remained a loyal Iomega fan from that day forward, even after a SCSI Zip drive 'click of death' nuked a big term paper a couple years later. Thanks for this video, it really bought back some vivid memories I haven't thought of in years!
I had an external SyQuest drive back in the late 90s, early 2000s.. I bought from a computer friend... Man that thing was a piece of junk.. Always had problems reading/writing disc.. Was pretty much unusable..I thought it was a defected drive, so I returned it, and shortly after the second one started doing the same thing..
I was working at a store called Computer City (owned by Tandy) as a Upgrade Technician in 1997. Despite the high price we sold around 3 Syjet 1.5GB models a week and were always being asked if the higher capacity version had come out yet. We were told by sales reps that a 3GB model was coming but never did.
Man, I hardly ever hear anyone mention Computer City anymore. We had one in my remote city. We had just gotten a Best Buy, then a CompUSA, then Computer City. It was an embarrassment of riches for a little while. CC vanished before very long, but I have fond memories of swooning over all the pretty cloud-adorned boxes in the Win 95 days, the foreign but intriguing New OS X display up front and center, and the huge end-cap displays of Creative Labs products.
When I was in my early college years, learning Photoshop 4.0, we had to use SyQuest disks for our work because nothing else at the time was big enough to store our Photoshop files.
I had an EZ135 while everyone else had a Zip drive, and while exchanging data might have seemed like an issue, we all got used to carrying our parallel port drives around. The real problem was reliability. I’ll never forget my first EZ135 disk failing within the first few months and losing everything on it. I ditched the drive at goodwill.
I always found SqQuests reliable but they always sounded like they were on the verge of rattling themselves apart. The distinctive sound of a rushed designer ejecting a still-spinning drive would probably trigger a stress reaction in me, even 25 years after I last heard it.
definitely the sound nightmares are made of!
The look of that first Zip drive was a master stroke on Iomega's part IMHO. The Zip looked like a cool piece of consumer tech that you'd want to own, compared to the boring beige box look of the Syquest drives of the early-'90s.
Agreed, it made storage look cool, I always liked the dark blue finish.
I still have mine stored in a box, must fire it up again some day.
Did they ever figure out what caused the click of death?
Good advertising campaign too.
@@ericBcreator Me too. At the time, i even had a battery pack for the Zip drive.
Intresting the Zip drive was not the biggest, best or really anything at the time. There was also plenty of alternative that was smaller.
What Zip had was a somewhat low price and a large marketing campaign.
Of cause Syquest was never ment as a consumer product. There was a very small market for a portable media that expensive for consumers.
While the original zip drive did sell well, with the Parallel port interface it was both clumsy and slow. yea sure, much faster than a floppy, but still fairly slow.
IT was really when the IDE and later USB version was made that the sails spiked. Both considerably faster and less bulky, and more so cheaper. With a price tag of $200 and a bulky parralel interface, it might not be a hard sell, but a lot of people just didn´t buy it.
When it dropped down to $100 (and below) and you could get it installed in the computer internally, it was a way simpler buy.
I started a graphic design business back in 1995 using nothing but a single Zip drive, a few cartridges, and some time in the University Mac labs where I was going to school. Today that business is an ad agency with 25 years under its belt doing a million dollars plus business annually. I couldn't have gotten it off the ground without my trusty Zip drive.
I remember using these regularly back in the day. My parents bought a 200mb one it to do backups for their business. I was given my own disk to keep my games and school stuff separate. My dad later had an EzDrive for his CAD machine. They were superior to ZIP, but yeah, the disks were expensive. CD burners ultimately killed both. Especially universal disc format, that let you treat a CD-RW like a mass storage device. You could get a whole stack of RWs for the price of a Zip Disk.
You should teach Kiryu-chan about it, he doesn't even know what a "seedy rawm" is
I still have a Fujitsu GigaMO 2.3GB magneto-optical drive that I use for storing financial records, due to the built-in error correction in the MO format. Also it gives me an excuse to use a MO drive.
i was doing IT support for small business. I install Syquest drive in my customers. WE all lost out.
@@deusexaethera Yea, that is a bit strange, there was load of MO format on the market, but it would seam like they really didn´t compete.
Granted, they was quite a bit slower. But mostly so in search, if you where mostly storing data it really don´t matter that much.
If sony wasn´t that stubern and market MD as a cheap desktop drive, it would probobly have won the market.
In the early ’90s I worked in an output service bureau in Vancouver. We had several workstation, mostly Macs, and at least one of every popular removable media drive. Each day I would pick a computer at which to get comfortable, grab a handful of dockets, and copy files over to the computer to start troubleshooting, load fonts, and prepare files for print.
I started an hour before opening to start up computers, put the coffee on, and get the photo processors for the high resolution Linotronic imagesetters. This gave me my choice of computer, which I usually chose for location rather than model, and the change to hook up a removable drive option. At the time, 5.25" Syquest was still most popular, so I usually used that, based on what media the jobs in the physical drop box used. I would also distribute the other drives (Zip, Bernoulli, Fujitsu optical, 3.5" Syquest) to the other workstations so the other workers wouldn’t need to shut down to add them later.
Inevitably my ambition to deal exclusively with one type of media would lose priority to the schedule of the day. A rush job would come in, I would be the next available operator (we called these NAO jobs), and I would have to grab that docket. Often that meant loading a different media. The official procedure was to either take over the workstation using that drive, have the operator of that workstation stop what they were doing and copy the files for me to a server, or shut down both systems to swap drives because you never hit swap SCSI devices. Guess which one we usually did?
As far as I know, not swapping SCSI devices never was a problem. Eventually we devoted an older system to be the media reader. Five or so different drives were connected to one workstation and when you needed files from removable media you used that computer and complied them to your computer over the network. This added a new bottleneck as operators often had to wait for the system to be available. This led to my solution, which was about once every couple of hours someone would grab every upcoming job using removable media (they had a different coloured envelope) and copy them all to the computer’s hard drive. Later, the operator working on that job would copy the files to their workstation to prepare the output. No duplicate drives, no competition for devices, and no dangerous hot swapping or time consuming shut downs.
What I remember about the different media is that Syquests were faster than the other, and had a satisfying click when the cartridge was properly seated in the drive. Fujitsu magneto optical was slowest but had high capacity and, being newer than the others, was rare. Zip, when it arrived, became very popular very quickly due to the low cost of both drives and cartridges. At the time 100 MB was squally enough, especially since we did a lot of the scanning for our customers and only supplied low res proxy files for scans. The high res files were already in the shop, so didn’t take up space on the cartridges. It wasn’t uncommon to get a job that required two or three Zips to load, but that was still cheaper than a 200 MB Syquest drive and cartridge and wasn’t nearly as inconvenient as the old low budget solution - a shoebox full of floppies.
In the end I remember removable media became almost a non issue. Zip and built in optical drives (CD ROM and DVD ROM) were the last hurrah if physical media. Most jobs came in through the internet via FTP. Most of our clients were professional designers and had high speed internet. Those that didn’t tended to have smaller, simpler files that could transfer via dial up.
I ended up taking some of the drives home when we dumbed them. I used a 2.5" Syquest (not the EZ Drive) for backups for a while, until I bought a DVD burner, and that was the last I saw of removable cartridges.
It remind be of the early to mid 1980s, when there were so many competing computer platforms and it wasn’t obvious that only two would survive.
No data formats survive if you extend the timeframe long enough.
I still have a Fujitsu GigaMO 2.3GB magneto-optical drive that I use for storing financial records, due to the built-in error correction in the MO format. Also it gives me an excuse to use a MO drive.
Awesome to hear about how it was on the inside. Thanks for sharing. :)
Signed,
Someone who would drop off 270MB Syquest drives at a service bureau for Linotronic output.
MO was around longer than zip if you count the 5 1/4" variety.
I use an SQ3270 drive as backup storage for my vintage Mac's. Quite a reliable drive. SyQuest's 3.5" format before the EZDrive. Ironically, a single cartridge holds more than most of the internal hard drives of the Mac's in my collection.
I worked in a small desktop publishing company. I persuaded my boss to invest in SyQuest drives as we were still using floppy disks to back up all our work. I only ever had one failure of a SyQuest drive, it was an 88mb one in adbout 1995. I found them extremely useful. Never really used zip disks at all. Very good video!
The "Winchester" style drives were pretty common in the mainframes in the 1970s, which had huge 10" or even 12" platters which could be removed and stored in cartridges which resembed pizza boxes. Most of them were top loading instead of front loading though.
I remember these things. They were all over the DTP industry and they were more often than not laden with viruses because they were passed around dozens of repro, design houses and printers. Yes, Macs had viruses.
Everything has viruses.
@@deusexaethera I’ve never had a virus on Mac since 2003.
Ha! I remember the good old days of blocking out an hour or two to wipe/reformat removable discs on a fairly regular basis. Norton Utilities was a good friend back then.
@@trashyraccoon2615 that you knew about. Don't be a rube, they were rife and omnipresent.
@@SpaceDave3000 Any articles or evidence that points to this? Anti virus software never really sold well on Macs for a reason
I loved the clamshell cases that the 44's and 88's were stored in. For years I opened up 5-10 per day, processing files for our designer clients. The cases had kind of a snug fit when they closed so they made this "pop" sound when you pried them open; I still remember that sound :)
I remember clients were very zealous about getting their SyQuest back, too. They'd have labels and asset tags and often custom branded clamshells. Zip disks usually would just have a business card and maybe a directory printout thrown in.
i remember that sound!
Oh man, you are bringing me back! They had a distinctive smell also.
Very accurate and interesting video. You did your research. I worked at Iomega for 12 years and was on the development team for the Zip drive. At the time I was managing technical support and it was our idea to put a window on the drive. It was also support data gathered from our CRM system that led to the design to be idiot proof. The Zip drive could only be plugged in one way and the setup was super simple. The manual was just a fold out cartoon. I remember during a company meeting when Kim Edwards, then CEO, announced one of the top 10 objectives for the year was to put Syquest out of business. We all thought that took a lot of balls but he did it. Since the Zip drive required less and easier support than the Bernoulli drives did, it was decided to get rid of the toll free support number and outsource support. Hence, I was laid off but not after I got a nice severance package. I also sold a lot stock that I'd purchased for $1.00 or $1.25 per share for $49 a share. I made a lot of money and a few months later the stock tanked because the market realized it was over-valued. About a year ago I tried to sell my Zip and Bernoulli drives and cartridges but got no interest so I threw them all away. They are just too big and bulky compared to USB storage and cloud storage. I heard a while back that Tony Radman, the guy who invented the Bernoulli drive, passed away in 2012. I knew him well and he was a really good human being - and brilliant. Keep up the great work on you videos.
Back in the day - Zip just seemed to be absolutely everywhere - all systems *had* to have one in - at my school, all the mac's had them, about 20% of the PC's had the Zip drives built in, too. Then CD-R's became a thing and then Zip and Jaz just faded away, almost overnight.
If you ever want to delve into Magneto Optical stuff, I can send you a drive and some media to try out :)
MO Discs are pretty neat. I still have a few stacks, new old stock I picked up last year. Sometimes I use them to transfer/archive files to my x68000.
Ahhh, the 90's, where tech came and went in the blink of an eye.
oh the Zip drive became some common because of what it really did - it gave us reasonably fast, reasonably cheap, reasonably large disks in an era where 1.44 MB just wasn't enough for anything other than a Unix online install disk, etc.
I was an early adopter and made sure to get the SCSI version, despite the fact that I had to pay an extra hundred bucks for the controller card - sadly a few friends didn't bother to read the specs and got themselves the parallel version. One actually stuck with that version, even after seeing how mine performed. The parallel version was like a read/write tape drive without all of the retensioning, etc - super slow. The SCSI version was a slightly slow hard disk with a low seek time - but for that era, that was enough. I used to bring mine into the Mac lab and booted via the Zip drive - it ran just fine, even running Photoshop, etc.
Frankly, it was almost as good as the SyQuest drives that we had in a few labs (and I still have an 88MB cart around still), and media was 20 bucks a pop or less, not 50 or more. :D
When the IDE/ATAPI version showed up, no shock it became a standard feature for a few years there.
I forgot to add my comments about early CD-ROM burners, as it was a completely different experience than people have now. In '96 or so a group of my friends pooled money to buy a quad speed burner - a Yamaha (the best brand at the time). It was a SCSI unit, and you had to insert the CD into a caddy vs having a slide tray like modern drives (when you still see them lol). This quad speed burner cost US$1200, and blank disks were $12 a pop on our first order - it went down to $8 each on second order and kept dropping until it was about $4 a disc for a while - then a few years later the 30-packs started showing up at office supply stores and Best Buy and the price hit the buck each we paid for most of that era.
Burning a disc was understood to be the sole activity of the PC until it was completed - all other software (including most systray apps) was shut down and you might even disconnect the ethernet cable just to be sure nothing would trigger some app from launching at the wrong time... for you see, once you begin writing a CD-ROM session, you must complete it without running out of data to write, or the whole burn fails. This was a real concern even when using a relatively pimped out machine for the era... "buffer underrun" was the thing to be worried about, and all of the burner software prominently displayed how much data was in the buffer - any time it got low, you got worried, and when it was mostly full you could relax a bit. We had many coasters in that first year... 12 bucks a pop for the initial ones, for poor ass college students who just wanted some warez... :D
Luckily these days the bus can transfer much more data, and drives can copy much faster, and SSDs don't ever have to wait for a head to move or a platter to spin... but in the mid 90s, you could either get a winning CD that became an awesome tool, or some place to set down your can of pop and not get the table wet.
I remember Zip drive for Sega Dreamcast
Man, I love your content. Your videos are excellent, great quality, montage, playing with focus change on scenes, lots of interesting information - just amazing.
I am still using ZIP disks with my samplers but never heard about systems which you showed up. Thank you!,, it was a great journey!
Despite being a technology nerd, I don't think I've ever heard of this. I never had a ZipDisk but the Click of Death seemed more ubiquitous than you made it seem here, as it also had the "disks affected pass on the click to other drives" failing.
I think it might be the other way around -- the Internet has made Click of Death out to be more than it really was. I remember hearing about it a couple years after I no longer cared much about ZIP disks. Mine had always been fine, and everyone I knew that used them were fine, too. (Although I didn't know heaps of people using them.)
I would imagine it would be different if you were a member of an institution where they were heavily deployed. Like a school or office that relied on them for daily operations. I did end up using Orb disks for one class I took in Uni, but other than that, it was basically floppy or CD for information interchange. I was never in a position where one person with a shredded disk would just start taking out drives, and having the problem escalate from there. I think that experience would likely change one's perspective of the failure rate.
EDIT: Just wanted to add, I have gotten into retro stuffs in the last few years and now have maybe a dozen ZIP drives -- internal ATA and SCSI, external SCSI and parallel. No issues, other than acquiring a couple DOA drives that never worked at all, for one reason or another.
@@nickwallette6201 On the contrary. We used them at my former employer. Click of Death was ubiquitous. Even worse, you could get "disk clap" where one failing drie would affect the mechanism of a disk, which would then damage the mechanism of a "clean" drive when inserted into it. We went through DOZENS of drives on one government system we were trying to qualify.
@@dennisp.2147 Yeah, I'm familiar with the failure mode:
If a disk had damaged media, it would snag the heads of a working drive, and either misalign them or rip them off completely. That drive would then damage the media on any inserted disks, and so on.
It's a bit of a house-of-cards situation, which is what I was saying previously about this being widespread in any shared-use institution. It would take out a lot of drives in the area of influence of that patient-zero disk, and spread from there.
But, if you had a single drive at home that you used with only your media, the chances of this problem happening to you seem fairly low. You would have to be the Patient Zero Disk owner.
Apparently later models weren't quite as robust, having been cost-cut more, and thus failing more often, when Iomega succumbed to the same market realities that had taken out all of their competitors: Third-party media, hardware cost pressure, and rewritable optical drives and solid-state media.
@@nickwallette6201 It was bad enough that the Fortune 500 company that I worked for banned their use on any in-house systems and their inclusion in any designs for clients. Hardly what I would call isolated.
@@dennisp.2147 Well, again, I think that depends on how it's used. The idea of (relatively) high-speed, high-precision, close-tolerance removable magnetic media was probably doomed from the start because of the potential for widespread damage. BUT, it seems like there were hot spots of cascading failures, and then a lot of individuals who used them with carefully-handled disks, and never had an issue.
In that sense, the perceived scope of the phenomenon itself varies wildly by your proximity to a cascade of failures. There are a lot of us out there who used them for years, and have nothing but fond memories. And now I use a whole fleet of them to carry larger files between my retro computers, nearly all used, and they're all fine save for one that never showed up on the ATA bus, and another that wouldn't write reliably.
So yes. I think it's entirely possible the problem is exaggerated. When it happens, it's bad, and it's potentially widespread. But if you never have a disk with badly defective media, you could probably go your whole life without any trouble.
I absolutely loved SyQuest drives. Had quite a few back in the day, both a 5.25" 88 MB unit installed in an external SCSI case for my Macs and an internal 3.5" SyQuest EZdrive mounted in my PC. I really did not like Zip disks. The disks themselves just seemed a bit more delicate than SyQuest cartridges. I never had any of the often-talked-about reliability issues with SyQuest drives. And yes, I will freely admit that Zip disks didn't sound as "cool" to me as SyQuest drives. I just loved the "clunk" of engaging the drive lock lever, the whirring noise as the disk came up to speed, the clickety-clack sound as you accessed data on the disk, the reverse whirr as the drive spun down, and the clunk of ejecting the disk. Very hard drive like. Zip disks just sounded too plain and "floppy-like" to me. :) Iomega at least redeemed themselves in my eyes with the Jaz drive. Not only did it have incredible capacity for the time, but it brought back most of those lovely whirr-clickety-clack drive noises. :)
I remember when Zips came out, and I had one of the first drives out of anyone I knew. I used to bring the drive, and the disk to my local Image Bureau (remember those) to get my films produced to make printing plates. They were so impressed that they bought a drive themselves... Those were the days!
I am surprised you didn't mention the original 3.5" Syquest removable drives that succeeded their 5.25" drives which had capacities of 105MB and 270MB on each cartridge. When the Zip came out, the Syquest 105MB removable drive cost $300 and 105MB carts cost $50 each. As you can imagine, the 105MB drive was dropped like a hot potato immediately. This finally drove SyQuest R&D into high gear to catch up in the price war with Iomega.
One BIG problem with the Zip drives not mentioned here was the fact that they cut corners not just on their reliability, but also in compatibility. Even though the SCSI version was marketed as a SCSI drive, Iomega removed a number of standard SCSI features such as parity, and fixed SCSI IDs that made some SCSI devices incompatible with it. The Zip forced parity and only allowed SCSI IDs 5 and 6, which made them frustrating to set up and use. This was false advertising on Iomega at their best. To make it worse, when engineers dissected the Zip, they said all Iomega had to do was add a component that costed about 5 cents to the circuit board to fix these deficiencies. If Iomega was SO cheap to cut corners that much, I knew reliability issues were going to pop up. My prediction was spot on. The result was the "Click of Death". Of course, great marketing easily covered these defects up to the average consumer, so Iomega didn't care as long as they got the $$$.
Otherwise, great video on Syquest's history. I had the 44MB, 200MB, 270MB models and all were and still are reliable. I just tried out my 200MB and 270MB drives on my Atari ST and both work like a champ.
I know several people who used Zip disks daily for the better part of a decade and none of them ever experience the Click of Death. As with most problems, its frequency of occurrence was greatly exaggerated by angry people who had the bad luck to experience it. Iomega may have cut corners, but they cut corners in ways that didn't affect 99.9% of users.
I also noticed that he left out the 105Mb and the 270Mb SyQuest drives. I had one of these drives and I used it quite a lot with many cartridges, with only one 105Mb drive failing. When the zip 100 first came out, I was very impressed. Shortly after, I heard about the 'Click Of Death' and bought the SyQuest solution instead.
I sold a lot of all the used drives and cartridges during the 2000s, and had very little issues with the SyQuest drives/media, as well as the Jaz drives/media. I used to shudder every time a customer would bring in a zip drive and stated "It's clicking a lot, and I have all these disks to recover..."
Love your videos on the competition between Syquest and Iomega. I'm always fascinated by the use of these computer data storage mediums from the late 1980s to 1990s.
I worked at both SyQuest and Castlewood throughout both their history. I have very fond memories of both companies but also experienced the sadness of being part of the downhill spirals of each.
That "A drive called SyQuest" title pun was the best I've seen in quite a long while.
I wonder how many of "the kids" got the joke...
@@dennisp.2147 I was asking myself the same question. Then I concluded that I probably don't want to know :)
I remember when the Zip drives killed floppies because of their increased capacity, and than later the USB flash drive killed the Zip drive because of capacity and the fact that no other hardware was needed because the computers started coming with USB ports.
Loving the A Tribe Called Quest reference/wordplay on the title card.
Made me listen to it again. :D
I did a double take, "I could listen to A Tribe Called Quest right now." Good vid btw.
We had a computer that used SyQuest cartridges in my elementary school, it was used for storing programs because the Macintosh didn’t have enough memory. Once Zip disks came out, that’s when our school replaced them. Zip Disks were lighter and were more portable!
Remember losing all the data with zip drive click of death.
Oh man, just the thought of the name "Sparq" still gives me chills. I had gone through 3 drives and 5 disks with first hand experience of data corruption and drive failures. The first drive had a head crash, accompanied by a dreadful grinding noise and resulting in a damaged starter disk. You could actually see the head element hanging off the arm by a thin wire inside. Once the second drive was damaged by the same disk, that's how I learnt about cross-drive damage via bad disks the hard way. It took some years later, a 3rd drive off ebay and some good luck rituals to recover the data from all the disks, including the damaged one, and never used them since. Ah, but back in the days of Napster downloads before having access to a CD burner, it was a neat thing for a while, though it taught me a valuable lesson not to place all your eggs in one basket (disk) and to back up regularly.
That's just crazy how the same disk can cause multiple drives to crash! Like a virus or something. Did any other format have problems like this?
@@tulippasta Iomega's Zip drives had that problem with bad disks damaging read/write heads, which in turn damaged other disks read in that same drive.
I have been there too. I had an external and internal SparQ. The ATAPI drive died quickly and the external SparQ just chewed up drive after drive or refused to read them. I was really tempted by the Orb after seeing adverts everywhere but the SparQ ended up burning a real hole in my wallet and I'm glad in retropspect that I forwent the shonky Castlewood product. I now have SCSI Zip and Jaz drives for my vintage computers and those have held up fine. I had forgotten. how noisy these drives all were though. I thought the Jaz drive was performing a SparQ tribute act when I first powered it up with a disk in until I realised that it was just things were back then.
Thanks for reminding me of Napster - fun times.
I liked iOmega Zip for a while in college, but over time they started to have serious reliability issues for me, to the point where I stopped using the drives and discs altogether. The kicker was when a website that I had designed was completely lost on a dead disk.
3:00 huh, funny enough, the last time I saw floppy drives in active daily use (outside the retro sphere) was when I visited a printing press facility.
They said that nothing beats a floppy drive to hold printer settings and color parameters and can stay in the client folder (the paper one).
(I guess upgrading a press that is the size of a bus also contribute to the decision)
I never had heard of SyQuest, but I remember my dad using Zip Disk all of the time.
I love the videos about computer-related history.
I used 3 1/2 floppy disk as a kid, but I've never heard about SyQuest and Iomega products, later on, I just started using CD's
When I was in middle school, I remember saving up my money to buy a 100MB Zip Drive so I could store all the websites, photos, and games on the "big" disks when all I had was floppies. When my Dad got a CD burner, it was such a change. CD-RW disks were unreliable, but you could store so much more. I ended up saving my money to buy my own CD burner once I was building my own computers from other people's old parts. After helping build a wireless internet provider with a single 1.5Mbps T1 and having "high speed" internet at home, CDs were all we used. Now 128GB is under $50 on a reliable flash drive. Or I can easily just upload files with Starlink and a "free" service like OneDrive to share or move files around.
I worked at SyQuest during the very end. Ed Harper held an all hands meeting to give the "The rumors about things being are bad are true but there's still hope so please don't quit yet speech." This was after the previous quarter where the 10-Q said that if they didn't get funding that quarter, they would "no longer be an ongoing concern". Afterwards there was a "not going out of business sale" where employees could buy office equipment. But no! Not going out of business.
During the meeting, Ed when on and on how nobody told him there was quality issues. I don't know if that was true or not, but the guy whose job it was to tell him most certainly knew.
Marketing also knew the end was near. They started treating trade shows as parties for themselves and not clients.
Contracting agencies started getting bad checks. The C suite didn't tell agencies, the contractors, or even their own employees about this. The contractors just got a call from the agencies saying the checked bounced and to go home. Their reports ran to accounting begging for something to be done. Some of them were pretty high up and had no idea that the end was near.
Carole King had the master of her new album on a SyQuest. Oops.
At the very end they were trying to release the 4.7GB Rocket.
It was just a cluster fck. Everybody that knew what was coming in the back door or had an ear in tech support or sales knew it was dead man walking. Except for Ed Harper.
I'd never gotten into any of these formats back in the day.
Went from floppy disks to CD-Rs to DVD-Rs to thumb drives to external hard drives.
But I did pick up a zip 100 drive back a few years ago at a thrift store just out of curiosity.
Also, sd/memory cards to external hard drives to solid state drives.
I had a Zip drive, Jaz *and* a Sparq (at different times). The Zip worked well for me but I just didn't need it - it wasn't enough capacity for archiving, and I didn't ever have a need to transport 100MB worth of files around. The Jaz and Sparq I thought could be useful because the cartridges were so massive and cheap, so I could buy multiples and use them as backups or archives. But both ended up failing on me - I can't remember if it was the cartridges or drives or both, but ultimately it didn't matter. The tech just wasn't reliable and I ended up stopping use of both drives after buying only my initial cartridge for each. Just moved on to CD-R afterwards, which was a downgrade in capacity but the size of the discs meant I could store a bunch in a smaller space. And CD-R's were reliable and cheaper. I still have basically all of my CD-R archives from that era and they all still work (as far as I know, but I do grab something off them every now and then).
Excellent video!! I had no idea about the Sparq and Orb media. I remember seeing ZIP disks at a friends house and was in complete envy seeing him move around large files with ease and such small portability. At the time I was in college and couldn't afford one but wanted one so badly. I remember going through 2 zip drives and them both eventually failing. Long live CD/DVD drives!
Hi Colin, this video gave me so much nostalgia, the sound of the drives spin-up and spin-down still stays with me.
Great little documentary. I had no idea I was interested in removable storage!
"A Drive Called SyQuest" I see what you did there. Well played
I never heard of SyQuest drives until the Futuristic Sex Robotz released their song Back in the Day, where they mentioned the drives in passing. Now, I can see why SyQuest and Zip drives are gone. Why settle for inferior technology when we have USB flash drives, external hard drives, SD cards, and the Internet to store stuff? Even optical discs are far better than what SyQuest and Iomega pushed.
Having been through the twin misery of zip disks that worked until they didn't, and CDs that could probably only be read in the drive that burned them, I feel we are truly blessed these days by high capacity USB sticks.
Funny you should mention USB sticks. Besides my years at Iomega, I worked on one of the first USB flash drives ('stick'). I wonder if anyone has ever heard of the company - Agate (failed flash in pan).
@@geoffbarton5917 I'm pretty sure I remember that name.
I used to own a SparQ, I think it was around 1998. I can confirm the damage issue. It was like a form of hardware virus... by the moment I realized what was going on, I had the drive replaced 2 times under warranty (must have cost a fortune to SyQuest) and lost several disks, with all its data, and quickly lost interest in the format. Hard drives also got significant increases in capacity which helped making such solutions less useful to individuals, and soon enough CD-burners started becoming affordable and popular, too.
Backing up to Blu-ray discs now and eagerly awaiting the next storage medium.
They were also killed by horrible reliability issues. I only had a couple of the 1gb discs and they both developed unrecoverable corrupted sectors that lost or damaged files, with minimal use, primarily as backup.
Wow, I remember seeing the Orb in stores briefly and I also used Zip back in the day, but I had no idea a 750MB Zip Drive was ever a thing.
Same here, but it came out too late in 2002. It would've been a game changer if it was released in 98 or 99.
@@maroon9273 Yeah, absolutely. I got my first computer in early '99 and there was definitely a need at that time. I had the option of a built-in Zip 100 or a CD-RW as the second drive, I took the Zip Drive due to how awful early CD burners were.
Still have my SparQ drive. Only ever had 3 cartridges though, the starter and 2 blanks. I never even used it that much when it was relevant, mainly just to back up stuff. I do recall have issues with at least one of the cartridges, but its been so long I can't remember specifics. I think I got it on the tail end of it being relevant and as this video mentions, CD burners were right there within a year and way more reliable. As a side note, I also recall a buddy using Stacker to fit 40MB on a 1.44MB floppy, was about as reliable as it sounds lol.
A fascinating history - thank you. Even the ads were nostalgic!
At my work we had Sparq drives and they were fast enough that we could run Diablo 2 directly from them. So when work was slow, out came the diablo sparq disks.
I will never forget it. I got totally screwed by Syquest after being loyal for years. I started with the 44meg removable drives. I had the final version of their removable media, a drive and lots of disks, tons of issues. They promised to replace or fix everything if I shipped it to them. A few weeks later they filed bankruptcy and I ended up with NOTHING. They literally had me ship everything I had to them with no intention of repairing or replacing but to use as leverage in the Bankruptcy...a final F you so a loyal customer. I still remember that guys voice I was dealing with, it was a lesson learned for sure.
Thanks for reminding me of the one piece of computer equipment I'd gladly take a sledgehammer to. Outrageously expensive discs, data failures and a whole lot I've forgotten about. And the failures happened in pretty well in a lab setting. God I hate those damn things, a frustrating nuisance from the start.
I love these digital-archeological videos
I still have my Syquest EZ drive backup drive and some cartridges. It was a great way to save audio files and mix info from ProTools. Those were the days when you recorded to SCSI drives that were super expensive for massive (for then) storage. When the ZIP drive came on the market I picked that up as well. It's stored in the same briefcase so they co-exist but I haven't used either for over a decade. Then I bought a Syjet ... Thank goodness for flash drives, CD and DVD for backup storage. And of course don't forget the Colorado Tape Backup System that were for sale during the this era.
Amazing video, thanks for about that. I must to confess I had a quite different experience, I had two ZIP drives and both suffered with the "click of dead", I definitively lost a lot of data. I decided to buy a SyQuest SyJet. This unit never had an issue, and in fact, still working with a pretty old computer I have for romance. Lol. Thanks so much for the video.
Now playing - A Drive Called SyQuest - We’ve Got The JAZ
Loved this video. I remember selling these drives back when I worked for CompUSA. Thank you for the memories..
These videos make me sad and nostalgic about those times. I owned every gadget and format available at the time, including tape drives. And I really miss them all. They never failed on me. I even had a DLT 7000 for Mastering DVD on tape to send over to DVD plants around the world for mass production. I always took proper care of my equipment and 15 years ago thought on opening a computer museum but while on a trip I had my house robbed. The thieves emptied it and even stole my car. I was left with the clothes I had and my backpack. Damn. I really miss all I collected during 40 years.
loved the A Tribe Called Quest reference in the thumbnail lol
What a blast from the past! I was amazed to see a PLI logo early in the vid; I sold a lot of that brand back in the early days of Mac. I also both sold and used a lot of Syquest 44s & 88s, 100 MB Zips and 1 GB Jaz drives and disks. I still have both drives and disks for Syquest 44s, Zip 100s and Jaz 1GBs. The Zips were my favorites for cheap, convenient transfers, but the Syquest and Jaz were a lot more usable for active working storage due to their speed.
Great video. This was the big format war when I was just getting into computers. I had a Syqest 88c on my first computer, a Mac IIsi. We used them as an external hard drive. The impact of the first Zip disks on the market was massive. Equally as impactful as FireWire Drives years later.
Syquest was awesome at the time. Among Mac users, in my area at least, the EZ 135 was extremely popular. I still have a load of disks and my drives. While they didn't touch the numbers of the ZIP disk they were faster and cooler.
Boy does this bring back memories, the sound of a bad disk spinning up or getting ejected while still spinning is a thing of nightmares
Some of the first mp3s I ever downloaded as a kid were saved on zipdisks. Great stroll through memory lane :)
Great video. Back in the 90's, I had a SyQuest EZ 135 drive, a Zip drive, and an Orb drive. I didn't realize how quickly SyQuest went out of business.
By late 2000, I had purchased a CD burner. CD-R and CD-RW discs were cheap. CD burners definitely killed the types of removable media featured in the video.
By 2004, I had purchased a DVD burner, and started buying USB flash drives.
For the last decade, USB flash drives and the small 2.5" portable hard drives (powered by entirely USB) have been my choice of removable media. I currently use a 2TB 2.5" USB 3.0 hard drive for offline backups. It gets stored in a fire safe.
What a blast from my past. Thanks for sharing this.
I remember using SyQuest drives back in the early nineties...for software development...specifically for replicating an entire software source tree so all files where portable and available....worked well for a while then I got burned hard by reliability issues...and since the client paid for the hardware and media, I was blamed for the failures...for they had none...I sent all 3 replacements back to them...and gave up on the format...they could not make the stuff work either. After that I avoided anything similar...and embraced laptops for a time.
Oh my. Thats the greatest pun I've seen in a youtube thumbnail. Good on ya Colin.
These things were magical, I worked for an ad agency and we used to rush these Syquest in the newspaper and it was amazing for the time. The Syquests were gold
Amazing mini documentary, thanks a lot, Colin! 💜
This got my wondering if my Zip and SyQuest disks will still be readable after being untouched for approximately 25 years :-)
Zip disks still are. I sometimes have cause to move data from a legacy G3 system too old to use USB jump drives to a newer machine, and I have a USB-cabled 250 Zip drive that does that work for me. (Curiously, none of my Jaz disks still work, but that could be because I have a failed mechanism.)
I had a few Syquest portable and external Hard Drives in the Late 80s & early 90s. They were reliable and not prone to break down, but the zip drives sure killed that company off. Thanks for bringing back those memories. 👍🏽
As a person who is fairly obsessed with computers I’m surprised how many of these formats and sizes I’d never heard of.
You are making me miss my zip drive! I had one back in 1994-95 era. So nice to put MS Office 95 on a zip cartridge from over 60 floppies!
Now there's a blast from the past! When studying for my multimedia degree in the late 90s, the university used SyQuest drives so students can save their files as floppy disks were just too small. The reputation of the SyQuests drives wasn't good: highly unreliable. Some of us, including me, moved to Iomega ZIP 100 and never had a failure. When I got my first job, I convinced my employer to get them and never looked back. We eventually upgraded to Iomega Jaz, but these discs WERE unreliable, we ditched them for the 750MB ZIP. Eventually, we started to use network storage as it was more cost-effective. I have fond memories of ZIP, a total lifesaver.
I remember the Zip Disk. It was a dream to be able to store so much data for a so reasonable price. I loved the Zip Disk! I very nice video, as a always. Thanks!
I worked in a printing company with Desk Top Publishing. Setup was a Mac IIcx and a Syquest drive. Loved it. Very productive workstation.
Great video. Interesting from start to finish. I'm impressed you had all those drives to include!
I can still hear the sound of a Syquest 44mb spinning up and mounting, and the sound of pushing the little button to spin it down before pulling the lever to eject it. Very tactile format :)
The Zip eject mechanism always struck me as slightly violent. They came out so suddenly that I was constantly surprised they didn't shoot across the room.
Although Iomega's Zip/Jaz products eventually were obsoleted by CD burners and flash drives, it should be noted that Iomega made blank CDs and USB flash drives. If you can't beat 'em, join 'em.
I still have my EZ135 drive. It worked well for the time, and the speed over the Zip was appreciated. You missed out on the whole Zip drive "Click of death" though, where similar to what you mentioned on other drive products, a dodgy disk could ruin a drive, and that drive would further ruin disks. And in an academic environment with lots of students, lots of Zip drives and lots of Zip disks, the result was nasty!
What I remember about Zip marketing was how sterile the setup looked. There was a computer on a desk next to a Zip drive on its side with the light on, but no sign of a cable. In reality the drive used a very thick and stiff SCSI or serial cable. The cable was stubborn and often made it difficult to orient the very light and flimsy drive the way you wanted it. I felt the marketing was misleading by hiding the ugly bulky cable in the ads.
Search for Zip drive ads and you’ll see what I mean. Not only is the cable nowhere to be seen, the desk has no obvious cable pass though.
@@scottfalkner8013 Nobody else had anything better at the time, though. You knew it was going to be a SCSI cable or a parallel cable (which was essentially the same, with a different connector on one end) because that's all there was. Then USB came out, and they moved to that.
It may have been "optimistic" marketing, but if you knew anything about computers at all, you can't have been surprised.
I had a nice, super-flexible Belkin parallel cable for mine at the time. It was about as nice as an external peripheral could be.
Oh, the memories and feels this brought back.
Great video Colin! I’m really into the retro stuff right now and this was an awesome video to learn something new!
He is the only one I watch on retro computer stuff since it seems to be his own and not some donated computer.
I remember my brother bought into the EZ135 format and later regretted it.
Computer / office supply stores must have been cluttered with all those different media formats... and users frustrated if they did not have in stock the exact one you needed.
A year later, I understand the thumbnails reference. A Tribe Called Quest reference, I love it!
WOW I loved this video, I used a few of these formats over the years. Mainly the Iomega ZIP and Jazz. I used Iomega Ditto tape storage at a job I had back in the late 90's.
Working at a printing pre-press shop at the time I ran into almost all of these media types. We had to be able to receive whatever the customer was sending. Mostly Zip disks, Jaz becoming more prevalent later as image sizes increased. Very few SyQuest 44/88 disks, but we had the drive around. Eventually was almost entirely CD based. Very cheap and almost every machine came with a drive preinstalled.
I had friends who designed rave fliers in 91-92 and I remember they were always complaining about how hard it was to get their Syquest discs back from service bureaus. Theywere a significant investment for a freelancer in those days and completely indispensable, there was no other way to get 44MB of data to a printer.
I was so happy to watch this video because I was a Apple computer use in the 1990s and used some of these formats. It was always confusing as to why there were so many. Now I know. I still have a 100meg Zip drive but only in storage.
Not technically a reason for syquest's failure, but my feeling is that the timing of the ZIP and the IMAC made the Zip disks REALLY popular for imac users. It almost felt like a forgone conclusion back in the days of the first Imacs. You'd either buy a Zip drive, or an LS 120 drive with your new imac
I rem back in the day i had a Zip SCSI Drive i used to back up my music productions and samples . Was awesome . Hadnt thought about this stuff in Years . Thanks for the refresher mate . Cheers
I picked up a Syquest external drive and a couple of disk for $10 total at a swampmeet a year ago. I remembered using that a while back and that brings back memories of the good old days of floppies and zip disks.
Interesting video, thanks. As an engineer I worked at Iomega on Bernoulli, Zip, and Jaz. So I was in the middle of much of this. I still have an assortment of mostly useless iomega devices. Good job on the video.
I guess another selling point was the fact that Zip drives where available in 4 different interface options - SCSI, USB, ATAPI/IDE and parallel port. I don't recall SyQuest drives being available in any other interface other than SCSI. They also appeared to be very cheap to produce compared to the heavy SyQuest drives.
I still have two models in my basement. They were brilliant. SO much faster and more reliable than Zip drives. I would argue about performance for Zip and Jazz drives. They were mechanically very fragile - in our labs they had a horrific fail rate.
This takes me way back. I worked at Convergent Technologies on the Megaframe. We used SyQuest as a backup solution. The main problem was that the disks forgot data. You would leave them on the shelf over night and a large portion of the data would be lost the next day.
This brings back memories. When I first started desktop publishing we depended on Zip disks. Good video.
I certainly remember using ZIP100 drives. I also remember two of them failing (one internal and one external) with the infamous "Click of Death". At that point I switched to CD-R drives and took the Iomega units to the local dump!
I had an internal EZ135 (IDE), that was bought brand new. It was already defective out of the box, so they told me to send it back and I received another one. Then the first disk that I bought didn't work, so I took the disk back to the store and it seems that this was also a common issue, according to their comments. So much for quality control and reliability. Shortly after, I bought a Zip drive and as far as I can remember, I think I only ever experienced one bad disk, among the 3-4 dozens that I ended up owning.
I probably still have that EZ135 stored somewhere...
This was definitely a contender. My family adopted the Zip and then Jaz drive. Jaz drives were great, although they were best kept on a desk. We used it for months before we read the label saying "do not place on it's side".
In Jan. 1997 I was 15 and obsessed with computers. My family happened to be in San Francisco and we drove by Moscone Center where I saw banners proclaiming that MacWorld Expo was happening. I quickly made a handwritten sign reading "SPARE MACWORLD PASS?" I only stood outside for 5-10 minutes before a kind woman in a business suit gave me her pass and said "tell anyone who questions you that I'm your mom!" I went in and spent a joyful day exploring the exhibit hall. Of the many memories I took away (including getting to use a 20th Anniversary Mac which was later given to Steve Wozniak as a token of appreciation!), one of my best was visiting the Iomega booth. I had previously stopped at a booth showing removable-disk drives (I suspect it was a SyQuest booth but can't be certain), and the people working that booth were utterly standoffish to me - obviously not interested in wasting their time on some random kid. By contrast, the folks at the Iomega booth *lit up* when I stopped by, and treated me a like a guest of honor. By the time I left their area, I was carrying two large bags of swag - tee-shirts, buttons, stickers, basically anything they could think to give me. Maybe they just didn't want to deal with packing all that stuff up (this was the last day of the show), but they made me feel so special, and I never forgot it. I remained a loyal Iomega fan from that day forward, even after a SCSI Zip drive 'click of death' nuked a big term paper a couple years later. Thanks for this video, it really bought back some vivid memories I haven't thought of in years!
I had an external SyQuest drive back in the late 90s, early 2000s.. I bought from a computer friend... Man that thing was a piece of junk.. Always had problems reading/writing disc.. Was pretty much unusable..I thought it was a defected drive, so I returned it, and shortly after the second one started doing the same thing..
wow, thank you for the rundown
I was working at a store called Computer City (owned by Tandy) as a Upgrade Technician in 1997. Despite the high price we sold around 3 Syjet 1.5GB models a week and were always being asked if the higher capacity version had come out yet. We were told by sales reps that a 3GB model was coming but never did.
Man, I hardly ever hear anyone mention Computer City anymore. We had one in my remote city. We had just gotten a Best Buy, then a CompUSA, then Computer City. It was an embarrassment of riches for a little while. CC vanished before very long, but I have fond memories of swooning over all the pretty cloud-adorned boxes in the Win 95 days, the foreign but intriguing New OS X display up front and center, and the huge end-cap displays of Creative Labs products.
Comp USA bought out Computer City in 97ish.
When I was in my early college years, learning Photoshop 4.0, we had to use SyQuest disks for our work because nothing else at the time was big enough to store our Photoshop files.
I had forgotten this. Thank you.
I had an EZ135 while everyone else had a Zip drive, and while exchanging data might have seemed like an issue, we all got used to carrying our parallel port drives around. The real problem was reliability. I’ll never forget my first EZ135 disk failing within the first few months and losing everything on it. I ditched the drive at goodwill.