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  2. Zip drive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zip_drive

    In the Zip drive, the heads fly in a manner similar to a hard disk drive. A linear actuator uses the voice coil actuation technology related to modern hard disk drives. The original Zip drive has a maximum data transfer rate of about 1.4 MB/s (comparable to 8× CD-R; although some connection methods are slower, down to approximately 50 kB/s for ...

  3. Iomega - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iomega

    Iomega Corporation (later LenovoEMC) [3] [4] [5] was a company that produced external, portable, and networked data storage products. Established in the 1980s in Roy, Utah, United States, Iomega sold more than 410 million digital storage drives and disks, including the Zip drive floppy disk system. [6]

  4. Click of death - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Click_of_death

    Click of death is a term that had become common in the late 1990s referring to the clicking sound in disk storage systems that signals a disk drive has failed, often catastrophically. [1] The clicking sound itself arises from the unexpected movement of the disk's read/write actuator. At startup, and during use, the disk head must move correctly ...

  5. Jaz drive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jaz_drive

    Internal and external 1GB Iomega Jaz drives with media. The Jaz drive [1] [2] is a removable hard disk storage system sold by the Iomega company from 1995 to 2002.. Following the success of the Iomega Zip drive, which in its original version stores data on high-capacity floppy disks with 100 MB nominal capacity, and later 250 and then 750 MB, the company developed and released the Jaz drive.

  6. PocketZip - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PocketZip

    The PocketZip is a medium-capacity floppy disk storage system introduced by Iomega in 1999. It uses very small (2×2×0.7in, 5×5×1.8cm) 40 MB disks. [1] It was originally known as the "Clik!" drive until the click of death class action lawsuit regarding mass failures of Iomega's original Zip drives, after which it was renamed "PocketZip".

  7. Bernoulli Box - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernoulli_Box

    The original Bernoulli Alpha drive spins a PET film floppy disk at about 1500 rpm, [1] 1 μm over a read-write head, using Bernoulli's principle to pull the flexible disk towards the head as long as the disk is spinning. In theory this makes the Bernoulli drive more reliable than a contemporary hard disk drive, since a head crash is impossible.