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The small removable discs themselves exceed 35 GB/disc and exceed 1.5, 1.1, 0.75 GB/min = 25, 19, and 12 MB/s, when measured inside, on average, and outside. That's up to 166X recording if 1X CD is 150 KB/s; and it's something else in DVD terms. That's faster than some hosts support. For example, people say some third party PCI USB goes no higher than 1.0 GB/min.
Iomega began with ATAPI ( SCSI over IDE) and USB, but by summer 2004 had begun selling FireWireFireWire or iLink ( IEEE designation 1394 is a personal computer and digital video serial bus interface standard offering high-speed communications and isochronous real-time data services, developed primarily by Apple Computer, completing development in 1 and had announced classic SCSI ( SPISPI may mean: Serial Peripheral Interface (electronics) Simulations Publications Inc. a board game company Society of the Plastics Industry, a trade association for the plastics industry Software in the Public Interest Sveriges Pensionarers Intresseparti) and SATAPI ( SCSI over SATA) versions of the drive. Iomega (NYSE:IOM) itself was supporting Microsoft WindowsImage use policy. Microsoft Windows is a range of commercial operating environments for personal computers. The range was first introduced by Microsoft in 1985 and eventually has come to dominate the world personal computer market. All recent versions of and Apple MacintoshMacintosh now known simply as Mac in all official capacities, is a family of personal computers manufactured by Apple Computer, Inc. of Cupertino, California, USA. Named after the McIntosh, a type of apple favoured by Jef Raskin, the Macintosh was launche, with LinuxThis article is about Linux-based operating systems, GNU/Linux, and related topics. See Linux kernel for the kernel itself. See Linux (washing powder) for the Swiss brand of washing powder. Tux, a plump penguin, is the official Linux mascot Linux is the n announced. Support for REV drives in Linux etc. as yet often appears Google-indexed by "RRD", rather than by "REV", because in SCSI the drives actually describe themselves generically as RRD (removable rigid disc), not more specifically invoking the REV brand.
Also see: Jaz driveThe Jaz drive was a removable disk storage system, introduced by the Iomega company. These drives initially came in 1 and 2 GB sizes, but have since been discontinued. They were based on Winchester hard disk drive technology. The modern REV drive seems to, Zip driveThe Zip drive was a removable disk storage system, introduced by the Iomega company in late 1994. Later, it was also licensed to Epson of Japan. The Zip system was based loosely on Iomega's earlier Bernoulli Box system; in both systems, a set of read/writ and Bernoulli drive. Also see: Universal Disk Format.