Forum Archive

Go Back   3D Realms Forums > General Topics > Hardware Forum
Blogs FAQ Community Calendar

Notices

 
 
Thread Tools
Old 11-22-2012, 03:47 AM   #1
yellowdagger
Anybody Still use Zip Drives for anything?
I like Zip Drives/Disks yet I personally haven't found enough reasons to use them.

Aside of their natural faultiness they seem to be good for transferring large files to older dos machines without wasting floppies or spending time on floppies and sometimes backing up large images/cad/Photoshop files when standard usbs seem to easily lost in your pocket or hard to store/archive.

Do you see any uses for them or anything of this sort?
yellowdagger is offline  
Old 11-22-2012, 10:09 AM   #2
KO Gilligan

KO Gilligan's Avatar
Re: Anybody Still use Zip Drives for anything?
I suppose they are still useful in Legacy systems. They were great for system restore because they were bootable, and good for quick back-up of files. There was also 120MB SuperDisk. Any system back-up and storage solution on modern machines would be better off using flash drives or optical media. I remember this discussion like about 10 years ago and the price of flash storage was still high enough that zip drives were a viable alternative.

That being said, all media storage is vulnerable. Although the technical specifications have flash memory lasting hundreds of years and hundreds of thousands of writes, I'm a skeptic. You need a back up plan.

Flash drives are a little more reliable than those clunky mechanical zips and floppies, but we've all plugged one in one day and got that flash drive "Drive not recognized" error, or had a corrupt file... moisture, magnetics, and environmental factors are still an issue with flash drives,
and they also mysteriously die - albeit not as dramatic as the death of a zip or floppy drive swishing and clicking and thrashing - those were the good-ol' days
Last edited by KO Gilligan; 11-22-2012 at 10:14 AM.
KO Gilligan is offline  
Old 11-22-2012, 08:44 PM   #3
Dopefish7590

Dopefish7590's Avatar
Re: Anybody Still use Zip Drives for anything?
I haven't used anything older than an old Windows 98 box I had laying around in ages. ZIP disks were cool when they served a purpose of being able to transfer large quantities of files between DOS and old Windows systems... But they never really caught on.

If you only want to use ZIP disks to copy files to a DOS machine you should consider virtualization, it would mean you won't have to work with old hardware, and you can do everything on your own computer... I mean like right now using things like VMWare Player or VirtualBox to use DOS on your system without having to install it directly on your disk. (Without using an emulator like DOSBox)

I even recorded a video showing you how to do it with VMWare... (Though I have Workstation, so there will be some subtle differences.)

You can get various versions of DOS from here...

Edit: It looks like MS doesn't even care about DOS in the least, so I can just put up a link to a working VM... Here you go..! You can mount the disk with VMWare to add files to it. (Like games or old legacy programs that aren't 100% working with DOSBox)
Last edited by Dopefish7590; 11-23-2012 at 03:50 PM.
Dopefish7590 is offline  
Old 11-25-2012, 07:44 AM   #4
8IronBob

8IronBob's Avatar
Re: Anybody Still use Zip Drives for anything?
I agree, nothing like having it be 1993 all over again without having to install it clean just by virtualizing it. If only my super old laptop would still work, I'd love to install DOS 5.0 on it, and play all sorts of Duke 3D, Quake, and Doom Series in its native roots in DOS. Heck, I can actually play BLOOD on that! YEAH!
__________________
PC Specs (a.k.a. "Galacticus Prime"): http://pcpartpicker.com/p/7Vk7FT
8IronBob is offline  
 

Bookmarks


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 06:34 AM.

Page generated in 0.09087896 seconds (100.00% PHP - 0% MySQL) with 16 queries

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.

Website is ©1987-2014 Apogee Software, Ltd.
Ideas and messages posted here become property of Apogee Software Ltd.