The Jaz drive was a removable hard disk storage system sold by the Iomega company from 1995 to 2002. Internal and external 1GB Iomega Jaz drives with media. Following the success of the Iomega Zip drive, which stored data on removable magnetic cartridges with 100MB nominal capacity, the company developed and released the Jaz drive. Iomega Zip drives were the choice for expanded external storage in the 90's and early 2000 because alternatives were 1.44MB floppy disks that were becoming a problem due to the nature of files and multimedia need much more space. CD writers were available at the time but were slow and un-reliable at times.
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The Iomega Jaz Drive is a removable hard disk drive that was introduced in 1995 and had a relatively short lifetime. The production of new drives stopped in 2002 as higher capacity, more convenient, and more cost effective storage media gained popularity in the marketplace.
Jaz Drive versus Standard Hard Drives
The Jaz drive is different from normal hard disk drives found in desktop or laptop computers because the disk and drive are two separate entities. In normal hard drives, the disk or disks are contained inside a sealed case and the case contains all the mechanical components to make the hard disk drive function. This hard drive case is then installed inside of a computer or connected via a USB or Firewire connection to the computer. For the Jaz drive, the 3.5-inch hard disk or disks are found in a cartridge and the mechanics to read the disks are in the drive component and not in the cartridge. The hard disk cartridge needs to be inserted inside the drive bay for the disk to be read. The actual Jaz drive is connected to the computer via a Small Computer System Interface or SCSI.
The image that follows is a 1 GB Jaz disk cartridge. The top of the cartridge contains a slider that is opened as the cartridge is inserted into the Jaz drive so that the magnetic heads can read or write to the disk.
Iomega Jaz Drive Capacity
The first capacity of Jaz disk was a 1 GB disk cartridge and later in 1997, a 2 GB disk cartridge was introduced. The drives for the 1 GB disks are not compatible with the 2 GB Jaz disks, but the 2 GB drives are compatible with both removable hard drive formats. At the time, these were very high capacity removable disks and were much more useful for dealing with larger files than the Iomega Zip Diskettes. In particular, Jaz hard disk drives were used to exchange these larger files with other individuals and for backup of large files on computers. In addition, because the Iomega Jaz Drive is a hard disk, it can be spun faster than floppy diskettes such as the Zip or other floppy disk formats. This means that data retrieval is quicker with Jaz disks than with floppies.
Jaz Disk Problems
Iomega Jaz Drives tended to experience more problems than typical hard drives. This is because normal hard drives, as indicated previously, are housed in a sealed case and there is essentially no contamination of the hard disk surfaces. Jaz disks are not as well protected in the cartridge casing and the surface of the hard disk eventually is contaminated with dust and debris causing the read heads to crash on the surface of the disk leading to loss of the disk and information stored on it.
Longevity of this Format
Any information stored on Iomega Jaz Disks should be transferred to a new format immediately, if working Iomega hard drives can still be found and connections to modern day computers can be made. Finding a working drive may be an issue considering the limited popularity of the format in marketplace and only seven years of production. Otherwise, older computers with the proper connections and operating system may have to be used if they can be obtained. Generally, hard disk drive formats have short longevities because the mechanics of the system fail.
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Having completed a hard look at the company's product lines, Iomega Corp. has discontinued its Jaz removable-storage drive.
The cancellation eliminates one of the mainstays of the removable-storage pioneer, which was the first company to capture the hearts of investors during the technology upsurge of the late 1990's. Iomega instead will focus its product efforts on the Zip drive and external CD-RW lines.
The company will also continue to sell 1-Gbyte and 2-Gbyte Jaz disks for existing Jaz owners.
In its fourth-quarter results that the Roy, Utah-based company reported on January 18, Iomega found that fourth-quarter 2001 Jaz revenue decreased $25.7 million to $11.5 million, versus fourth-quarter 2000 revenue of $37.2 million. 'The year-over-year decrease in Jaz revenues and (profit margin) is a result of the company's decision to discontinue the Jaz product line,' the company said.
The elimination of the Jaz was not unexpected. In an interview last June, newly-appointed CEO Werner Heid said the company would take a 'good hard look' at each individual product line, eliminating such lines where necessary.
In November, 2.3-Gbyte magneto-optical products began shipping, according to a respresentative of the Optical Storage Trade Association (OSTA), based in Santa Barbara, Calif. The technology was developed by both Sony Corp. and Fujitsu Ltd., but supported by companies including Hitachi Maxell, Ltd., Konica Corporation, Mitsubishi Chemical Corporation, Olympus Optical Co., Ltd., Teijin Limited, and RiTEK Corporation. Disks sell for about $30, while the format boasts a data transfer rate of up to 8 Mbytes/s.
'Iomega just discontinued its Jaz product, which was a close competitor of Fujitsu's Magneto-Optical technology in the past,' the spokeswoman said in an emailed statement to ExtremeTech. 'Consequently, this announcement will impact Fujitsu's customer base by increasing customer demand – a timely issue that impacts the entire removable storage industry.'
Recently, Iomega announced its first USB 2.0-enabled CD-RW drive, a version of its Predator line. The drive ships with the company's HotBurn software, which is designed to help streamline the CD-burning process. Burning a 60-minute CD-R with the new Predator drive takes less than four minutes; previous-generation USB 1.1 drives take about six times longer, the company found.
Copyright 2011-2021 digital-scrapbooking-storage.com
Having completed a hard look at the company's product lines, Iomega Corp. has discontinued its Jaz removable-storage drive.
The cancellation eliminates one of the mainstays of the removable-storage pioneer, which was the first company to capture the hearts of investors during the technology upsurge of the late 1990's. Iomega instead will focus its product efforts on the Zip drive and external CD-RW lines.
The company will also continue to sell 1-Gbyte and 2-Gbyte Jaz disks for existing Jaz owners.
In its fourth-quarter results that the Roy, Utah-based company reported on January 18, Iomega found that fourth-quarter 2001 Jaz revenue decreased $25.7 million to $11.5 million, versus fourth-quarter 2000 revenue of $37.2 million. 'The year-over-year decrease in Jaz revenues and (profit margin) is a result of the company's decision to discontinue the Jaz product line,' the company said.
The elimination of the Jaz was not unexpected. In an interview last June, newly-appointed CEO Werner Heid said the company would take a 'good hard look' at each individual product line, eliminating such lines where necessary.
In November, 2.3-Gbyte magneto-optical products began shipping, according to a respresentative of the Optical Storage Trade Association (OSTA), based in Santa Barbara, Calif. The technology was developed by both Sony Corp. and Fujitsu Ltd., but supported by companies including Hitachi Maxell, Ltd., Konica Corporation, Mitsubishi Chemical Corporation, Olympus Optical Co., Ltd., Teijin Limited, and RiTEK Corporation. Disks sell for about $30, while the format boasts a data transfer rate of up to 8 Mbytes/s.
'Iomega just discontinued its Jaz product, which was a close competitor of Fujitsu's Magneto-Optical technology in the past,' the spokeswoman said in an emailed statement to ExtremeTech. 'Consequently, this announcement will impact Fujitsu's customer base by increasing customer demand – a timely issue that impacts the entire removable storage industry.'
Recently, Iomega announced its first USB 2.0-enabled CD-RW drive, a version of its Predator line. The drive ships with the company's HotBurn software, which is designed to help streamline the CD-burning process. Burning a 60-minute CD-R with the new Predator drive takes less than four minutes; previous-generation USB 1.1 drives take about six times longer, the company found.
Iomega Jaz Drive Scsi
Iomega's Predator 24x10x40 USB 2.0 CD-RW drive, priced at $229.95, is available now with Iomega HotBurn software at retail and inside catalogs, and will be available later this month online at www.iomega.com.