From: “Robert A. Rosenberg” <hal9001@panix.com>
To: Alan Olsen <alano@teleport.com>
Message Hash: 71fd7c2d16f6d65c9251cbb999a942fe51437c350d0b09de0ad476d112bcba8b
Message ID: <v02140b00ad7a8191950e@[165.254.158.231]>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1996-03-24 10:23:13 UTC
Raw Date: Sun, 24 Mar 1996 18:23:13 +0800
From: "Robert A. Rosenberg" <hal9001@panix.com>
Date: Sun, 24 Mar 1996 18:23:13 +0800
To: Alan Olsen <alano@teleport.com>
Subject: Re: protection on IoMega ZIP drives
Message-ID: <v02140b00ad7a8191950e@[165.254.158.231]>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
At 2:45 3/23/96, Alan Olsen wrote:
>The big problem is with the zip drivers. There is some sort of
>incompatibility between SFS and the zip drivers. (I hacked on it for a
>couple of hours with no luck.) Win95 makes the problem worse, as it is
>difficult to judge just when the driver for the zip drive loads. (I have a
>number of complaints about the zip drive drivers. Lack of documentation is
>one of them...)
I can state that with a Zip Disk formatted for Macintosh use (and the drive
plugged into a Macintosh), the drive and disk are seen by the Macintosh as
a NORMAL SCSI HD and eligible for use as a Boot Drive (ie: There is a Mac
Driver on the Disk in a SCSI Driver Partition). I've Booted from a ZIP Disk
so this is actual not just theoretical <g>. I'd assume that if a Wintel
Machine had the Microcode to be able to boot off an external SCSI Drive
(something I do not know is normal for Wintel machines as it is normal for
Macintosh ones) the same situation would exist for Wintel Zip Formatted
Disks. All NORMAL SCSI HDs (or Cartridges) have their driver in a Driver
Partition so the HD/Cartridge can be read.
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1996-03-24 (Sun, 24 Mar 1996 18:23:13 +0800) - Re: protection on IoMega ZIP drives - “Robert A. Rosenberg” <hal9001@panix.com>