Magneto-Optical Drives Reviewed 179
MikShapi writes "Tom's Hardware is running an informative article about Fujitsu's new Magneto-Optical drives and the MO technology in general. Is the caddy finally back to put an end to scratched Disks?"
I remember (Score:2, Informative)
Re:I remember (Score:1, Informative)
Re:I remember (Score:1)
SuperDisk (Score:2)
Re:SuperDisk (Score:1)
Re:I remember (Score:2)
The drives tested may be "new", but MO disks have been around for maybe 10 years. They were standard for Mac DTP use here (Hong Kong) at least. Recently cheap CD burners are taking their place for that (and I managed to pick up a freebie as a result). Too bad they never got the momentum of Iomega's Zip drives with PCs. Though MO disks are half or less the price, the drives were several times more expensive. Then Iomega's QC went in the toilet an
Parent makes good point. (Score:2)
Re:Parent makes good point. (Score:2)
MO Drives. (Score:4, Interesting)
Ever notice how the MiniDisc format truely never caught on? LaserDisc? ZipDrives? CD-R and DVD+/-R have many more people buying equipment in those standards. These proprietary formats will always have a few adoptors, but they absolutely must improve (by an order of magnitude at the very least, DVD anyone?) on the current standards.
Now, if there were an MO drive/disc that could store 20GB on a double-sided disc, that would definitely draw some attention. And by attention I mean *consumer* attention. These are the folks that make the wheel of adopting turn.
Re:MO Drives. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:MO Drives. (Score:1)
The machines we are building now, don't have floppies. We put in DVD burners(lotsa sonys). People make a spare of important files on the server(RAID is a good thing) and on CDRs. Zip disks were cool until CD burners came down in price. Floppies are not dependable. We ghost the base image to a bootable DVD and put the image on the server.
How can they continue to make such a lame drive and sell it. If you scratch the d
Re:MO Drives. (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:MO Drives. (Score:2, Interesting)
Why is this? I imagine anyone who made a cd that didn't scratch so easil
Re:MO Drives. (Score:1)
Re:MO Drives. (Score:3, Insightful)
Laserdisc and MiniDisc where huge in Japan.
The entire graphic design industry seemed to love the Zip drives. Zip was great because it needed little attention and one could drag files without thinking. To do that with CD-R and writeable DVDs requires a bad hack to be installed into the OS and the disc to be specially re-formatted.
Re:MO Drives. (Score:1)
I actually own a DynaMO 640 USB. It's an older limited release asia-only model, not the new "Pocket" version Fujitsu has now. I've dropped it and crammed it in all sorts of hostile environments. The media, sitting alongside my CD-Rs, don't get dust
Re:MO Drives. (Score:1)
But I guess the MO technology is so old and relatively unknown to the typical user that this seems like news? I've got a (Mitsubishi) 640 MB MO drive since 1997 and a (Fijitsu DynaMO) 230 MB drive since 1993.
Oh, and even before then I had a 500 MB 5.25" MO drive in 1991. I still have all the disks fill with uh.. data, but can't find a working drive to read them.
Re:MO Drives. (Score:2)
Were huge? MiniDisc still is huge, and growing, as far as I can tell. I've got one myself and wouldn't replace it with anything. A few of my friends have MD players, and I see them all over campus and in class. And I'm in Canada, eh.
The Sony store wouldn't be selling them if they weren't selling well. Neither would other stores for that matter.
MiniDisc has huge potential. Imagine increasing the track density to that of DVD and using blue lasers. You could pack a h
MiniDisc big in Japan (Score:2)
Re:MO Drives. (Score:2)
So far, I've bought two minidisc players in my life, and though I love them dearly, Sony really needs to get their act together if they want these things to catch on big-time.
My first minidisc player was great, for all intents and purposes it was just a souped-up walkman. Rec
Re:MO Drives. (Score:2)
Re:MO Drives. (Score:1)
Re:MO Drives. (Score:2)
I much prefer the Fujitsu MO drive. We use the 2.3gb model and it blows away anything Iomega could do. After about 10 years of dealing with piss-poor products from Iomega (CD-ROM burners, Jaz, Zip, and Bernoulli Disks) I'm never buying an Iomega product again.
MO drives DID catch on. (Score:3, Insightful)
A product that has become indispensible and widely owned within its intended niche has "caught on" and MO certainly did that. Among digital archivists and many businesses with serious data integrity needs, MO has been the absolute standard for many years now. MO drives are in the wild all over the place and the disks (both 3.5" and 5.25", all generally backward c
Re:MO Drives. (Score:2)
Pardon? Here in the UK I can buy a pack of MiniDiscs at my local supermarket, in fact they're next to the tinned foods counter at Sainsbury's accross the road.
If that's not an indication of the level of penetration the format has, I don't know what is!
Oh, and we're using MO at work because we need to keep data for more than ten years. Something that's probably not going to be possible with other formats.
The new floppy? (Score:1)
I can see the slogans now... "Magneto-Optical! Floppy drive size, floppy drive speed."
(go for the USB 2.0 version)
Re:The new floppy? (Score:1)
just to sumarize (Score:2)
Nice try. (Score:2)
If you wait a few months you'll be able to swap the CDR with a DVDR and get a free color cell phone with a 1.3Megapixel CMOS camera built in. Did I mention the free printer?
Re:Nice try. (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
How long has 1.44 been standard? (Score:2, Interesting)
God I hope so... (Score:3, Insightful)
I always thought that removable media (cd's, dvd's) with no protective covering was the most idiotic invention of our time. I hope MO or something similar makes a comeback, but it always seems like whatever is cheaper wins. Ah, who cares about technical superiority anyway, right?
Re:God I hope so... (Score:2, Interesting)
Considering how many DVD rentals are scratched or scuffed when you rent them from the local Blockbuster/Hollywood/Mom-n-Pop I can't imagine why they didn't go for this design choice.
You could still have used recordable DVDs that were inserted in a caddy, but the store bought would would come in a sealed caddy. Seems like that's a better way to prote
Re:God I hope so... (Score:1)
Disk protection is an untapped market... (Score:1)
Uh?
A Caddy-driven DVD drive today would be no less compatible with CDs than the x4 Yamaha caddy CD-burner that I have in the office. As long as a user can open his caddies, there's no compatibility issue.
Furthermore, nobody says you have to buy them sealed. Buy them on spindles and either own a caddy or two and swap'em (in which case it would probbably make more sense owning a tray or
Re:Disk protection is an untapped market... (Score:1)
Re:God I hope so... (Score:2)
And there's where capitalism and best practices diverge: the current system is a great way to capitalize on repeat purchases, especially by the video rental stores.
I for one (not gonna say it!) can't wait until we start getting "open source"-style hardware designs. Already starting to happen with OpenBIOS and LinuxBIOS; other hardware should follow (especially as we develop na
Im sticking to my DVD-R (Score:4, Insightful)
By the way I was trying to back up loads of 1 hour DV films onto DVD - any thoughts on the most efficient process, the best MPEG2 encoder, etc?
Backing up DV to DVD (Score:1)
Re:Backing up DV to DVD (Score:2)
Re:Im sticking to my DVD-R (Score:2)
Ah, yes (Score:3, Interesting)
Does anyone remember zip disks? Marvellous little things; decent storage capacity, decent access times, not too big size wise... Yet they failed. Badly. Why? First of all, the price: There is no justification for buying a 150 USD zip drive with 10 USD disks when you can get a 50 USD CD burner with 25 CDs for 10 USD. Also, there was this whole deal about Iomega being really anal with the zip drive specs ( Which in turn caused high prices which I mentioned before because there simply is NO competition. ) and the basic lack of Windows support for zip disks.
Let's hope this doesn't happen to these MO drives, that'd be a shame... That said, when the hell will we be rid of diskettes?
Re:Ah, yes (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Ah, yes (Score:2)
Re:Ah, yes (Score:2, Insightful)
Yup. (Score:2, Informative)
Here's a nice link for those who have no clue what you're talking about:
What IS the "Click of Death"? [grc.com]
Re:Ah, yes (Score:2, Interesting)
It's like saying horses failed, because we now have cars.
They had their time. They were ubiquitous throughout the graphics industry and are still widely used. I do agree that the newer Zip drive formats are less popular and less needed today. They do still fill a niche. Kind of like horses still fill niche today.
At the time 100 MB Zip drives were sold, CD burners were several hundred dollars (definitely much more than the Zip drives) and CD burners had reli
Re:Ah, yes (Score:2)
Re:Ah, yes (Score:2, Interesting)
Sure, CD-R/RW drives are cheap now and Zip drives cost about the same as they did way back when. My PentiumII/350 cost a lot more 5 years ago (when I built my PC) than it costs now. In fact, it would be hard to even find a PII/350 being offered for sale these days. So did the PII chip fail? No. It wa
Re:Ah, yes (Score:2)
First of all, it would be safer to carve your data out of jello and throw it onto a freeway.
Secondly, said carving and chucking would be debatably faster.
Thirdly, you don't have to worry about the blue jello being incompatible with red cars.
Fourthly, somewhere along the line Zips got a really bad rap. One that no lifetime of replacement disks would
Re:Ah, yes (Score:2)
Zip disks definitely did not fail. For a number of years they were extremely popular, because they filled a niche that nothing else really did - they were relatively cheap, offered decent performance (certainly faster than the CD burners out at the time), and pretty easy to use. you could get a 100MB zip drive and 10 disks for like $150 at a time when a
The funny thing is? (Score:2)
Perhaps MDs will make a comback if this technology gets more mainstream?
Re:The funny thing is? (Score:1)
Re:The funny thing is? (Score:2)
The real floppy killer..... (Score:1)
this media ( optical, dvd, cd, tape) is going to exist for backup purposes.. but if you need data to exist for 10+ years.. i hope the drives to read the data will still work, or exist in 10+ years... So far dvd, and cd will be a good choice for 10+ year reading...
the u
Re:The real floppy killer..... (Score:1)
Re:The real floppy killer..... (Score:1)
Re:The real floppy killer..... (Score:1)
Re:The real floppy killer..... (Score:1)
but my guess is that a headphone magnets are NOT going to harm these things.. in fact.. i will test it right now with my own device... if it fails.. good.. then i will have lost nothing... buahah..
for fun i put it up to my sub, and all speakers in my apt... . now to read the stick.. and wow.. i still have the data on it.. how
Re:The real floppy killer..... (Score:1)
2.3GB MO not exactly new (Score:2)
MO, for me, is a story of 'if only'. MO storage has always beat the pants off of removable tape, Zip and Jazz, and CD-RW. It's only recently, with DVD-RAM, that MO had a true competitor.
MO has always been robust and (compared to other removable storage) quick. High end tapes have since eclipsed MO in write performance, but are still more fragile and certainly not random access.
MO has the advan
Re:2.3GB MO not exactly new (Score:2)
Uhh, high-end tapes have always had faster write-speeds than hard-disks. If all you want to do is write data fast, use tapes, or maybe a SAN or something like that. But then again, it's possible we have different opinions about what constitutes "high-end".
Re:2.3GB MO not exactly new (Score:2)
This was before AIT an I think even before Exabyte's Mammoth tape drive was released.
Was there fast tape tech then?
Re:2.3GB MO not exactly new (Score:2)
Of course, at this point, you may seriously want to consider using a SAN solution anyway :-)
Re:2.3GB MO not exactly new (Score:1)
What went wrong? Hard to say. But one can compare with zip drives to see what the difference was. You had parallel port zip drives, handy in the days of sneaker net, but I've never seen a parallel port MO drive. You could get IDE zip drives, but MOs
Plasmon optical platters (Score:1)
Unless I'm mistaken... (Score:1)
Is the caddy finally back to put an end to scratched Disks?
Unless I'm mistaken, drives don't scratch disks, so having a caddy won't mean and end to scratched disks. If I recall correctly a caddy wasn't exactly cheap and most people only had a few which were shared among many disks.
USB 1.1 (Score:1)
However, USB 1.1 is even more obsolete.
This Fujitsu drive makes no sense, even if
it had sATA, firewire, scsi or USB2.0.
why bother (Score:1)
MO drives? (Score:2)
One link: http://pepper.idge.net/whatswrong/mo/ [idge.net]
Please, move along.
Re:MO drives? (Score:2)
Re:MO drives? (Score:2)
What a crock of racist bullshit. Do you bash people that drive a Honda or a Toyota too because it's Jap?
MO drives are technically superior for data archival. I've owned one for years - the damn drive died before I had a single piece of media failure - and it died because my asshole of a landlady tossed it into the trash for me then dumped charcoal dust over it. I've had the drive since 1997, it was at one time a nightly incremental backup system for me. The drive was a Fuj
MO drives. (Score:2)
Mine's collected dust ever since. Media was like $20 a pop. For 640MB (?!?!) No thanks. I did tell them this too.
When I saw this article posted I was hoping they had a new model that had a larger storage capacity.
Re:MO drives. (Score:2)
interesting article (Score:1)
after about a year of using this machine as a backup server for small files (it only held 1.3 gigs total) one of the drives died in the machine.
the funny thing is, I have a hard drive from 1993 that still works fine and dandy.
I found the magneto disks just seemed to go bad over time and when my drive blew it was completely not worth the money to fix. If I
MO is obsolete (Score:1)
I've used a 640MB 3.5" drive with 30+ disks for some years.
I think it's one of the most reliable way to store information.
At least more reliable than two IBMs in a RAID-1, a CD/DVD backup to cheap media after two years or a magnetic tape left on a loudspeaker or TV.
And it (was) even way cheaper than ZIP. IIRC after the 10th 120 MB ZIP disk, MO was way cheaper.
ZIP worked out, because iOmega made the drive and was (at first) t
How to avoid scratched discs... (Score:2)
USE A JEWEL CASE!
Re:How to avoid scratched discs... (Score:2)
USE A JEWEL CASE!
Jewel cases are FAR too fragile. You look at it funny and it breaks. floppies on the otherhand could take a touch more impact.
Also, your media often times doesn't actually come with a jewel case.
Re:How to avoid scratched discs... (Score:2)
Also, your media often times doesn't actually come with a jewel case.
I've always found that the spring in the 3.5" floppy's door mechanism is it's downfall.
You can get good jewel cases... I just got a box of 100 slim cases that are pretty sturdy.
The big deal about jewel cases is that the surface of the disc isn't in contact with anything. A lot of people I know use sleeves and
Re:How to avoid scratched discs... (Score:2)
A step in the right direction... (Score:1, Interesting)
I work in a biomedical research lab and we have to keep data from years and years ago. This data represents several lifetimes of research and MUST be preserved. CD's and DVD's are too easily damaged and HDD's are too intricate to be reliable over long periods of use (MTBF's). Tapes are nice, but they are too slow during backups and restore, not to mention you normally have to use proprietary
Re:A step in the right direction... (Score:2)
As far as archiving goes, well, maybe i
Larger version (Score:1)
X-Men (Score:1)
end of life in 1998 (Score:2)
I guess I'llhave to call Fujitsu up tomorrow and see if they re-introduced them.
Damn fine drives actually - very reliable. I still use them.
Also - Panasonic has similar technology in their PD drives. Fujitsu is 3 1/2" media while panason is 5 1/4".
The most important feature of the MO disk (Score:3, Interesting)
One of the biggest reasons why floppies are still so widely used is that you can easily put several (inside a carrying case, of course) in your pocket and not feel too encumbered when you walk around or sit down.
I can only surmise that the standardization on CD/DVD rewritables was a secret plot by the cargo pants industry to increase sales.
Re:The most important feature of the MO disk (Score:2)
1.5GB storage, can be used just like a floppy disk.
Long Term Archival Storage? (Score:2)
Re:Long Term Archival Storage? (Score:2)
o I've dealt with tapes, they're not a good solution for the average desktop consumer.
o DVD is falling in price and will store 4GB+, but standards have yet to be sorted out (however you can get drives that do both + and -) and the media life is still questionable.
o I wouldn't recommend CDR for long term because the media is easily scratched
DVD/Adio CD Caddys (Score:2)
Of course, the entertainment industry WANTS you to damage your discs so you have to buy new ones, so it's in their best interest to make them as vulnerable as possible.
It would be great of manufacturers made DVD and audio CD players that used caddys, but it would never catch on enough with the public wit
And as a side note (Score:2)
Plus, it takes much more storage space!
No, I don't think caddies would have been a brilliant idea. Not for the mass-market product.
Re:And as a side note (Score:2)
Moving parts? What, one spring? In any case, it would be trivial to design a case that could be opened and changed if something broke.
As for storage, a CD in a caddy is no bigger than a CD in a jewel box.
Re:DVD/Adio CD Caddys (Score:2)
--Ah, we live in wasted times.
Re:Is anyone still using Magneto-Optical anyway? (Score:2)
Re:Is anyone still using Magneto-Optical anyway? (Score:1)
Who the hell uses cats to store data anymore anyways?
Re:Is anyone still using Magneto-Optical anyway? (Score:2)
i do.. (Score:1)
another really neat aspect is things like magnets dont have an effect on them. think of a cdrw that you can write to like a zip drive. sure they have those hacks that let you write to a cdrw like it's a
Hierarchical Storage Management (Score:2)
Re:MO IS NOT RELIABLE! (Score:2)