![]() ![]() OAD are what Iomega calls "Open Architecture Drivers."Īll you really need to know is this: If you have the SCSI version of the Zip drive you need the ADD drivers, if you have the Parallel Port version you need the OAD ones. ADD drivers are OS/2's own format and you'll see several such drivers in your CONFIG.SYS like "BASEDEV=IBM1FLPY.ADD" for floppy drives, and "BASEDEV=IBM1S506.ADD" for most IDE hard drives. Installation is also somewhat awkward, requiring you to figure out the difference between ADD and OAD drivers. The drive ships with DOS, Windows and Mac drivers but OS/2 drivers must either be ordered separately for $9.95 or, fortunately, downloaded free from the Internet or Iomega's BBS or WWW site. It's unfortunate that such a great puerperal seems to ignore OS/2 users and only grudgingly recognize them when forced to. We reviewed the Parallel Port version that, despite its slower throughput, offers much wider portability. It's available in a version that plugs into the Parallel Port in the back of your computer (with a printer pass-through), or in a SCSI model that offers greater throughput for computers equipped with a SCSI port. The external model we reviewed has a deep blue/indigo case, curved and sportily designed, built to lay horizontally or propped up on its side. The Zip drive is Iomega's suggestion to replace the lagging and sorely inadequate 1.44meg 3.5" floppy drives we've become so familiar with. But in the last year Iomega has Jazzed up their image and brought out a line of modern, snazzy and one might even say sexy looking peripherals that appeal to the home and small business user for a variety of reasons. ![]() Iomega has long been known for providing large-capacity removable media solutions, a famous example being the Bernoulli series of drives. ![]() OS/2 e-Zine! - The Iomega Zip Drive The Iomega Zip Drive ![]()
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