Iomega Zip 100 Portable Usb Drive Pc Mac | Desertcart Cyprus
Iomega Zip 100 Portable USB Drive (PC/Mac)
3.9/5
Product ID: 431678
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Details
Digital Storage Capacity1E+2 MB
Hard Disk InterfaceUSB 1.1
Connectivity TechnologyUSB
BrandIomega
Special FeaturePortable
Hard Disk DescriptionMechanical
💻Mac & PC compatible
📦70 floppy capacity
🔌USB interface
Frequently Bought Together
Description
🚀 Zip into the Future with Iomega!
PORTABLE POWERHOUSE - Take your data anywhere with ease
SEAMLESS CONNECTIVITY - Plug and play for instant access
FUTURE PROOF YOUR FILES - Unlimited capacity for all your digital needs
UNIVERSAL COMPATIBILITY - Works effortlessly with both Mac and PC
MASSIVE STORAGE POTENTIAL - Each disk can hold up to 70 floppies worth of data
The Iomega Zip 100 Portable USB Drive is a versatile storage solution designed for both PC and Mac users. With a plug-and-play interface and the ability to hold the equivalent of 70 floppy disks, this drive offers a seamless way to store and transport your data, ensuring you never run out of space.
Have a Question? See What Others Asked
Is this easy to use?
I have many zip disks to recover data from. these descriptions are not direct and confusing. is there a usb cable that will go to an apple computer?
I'm buying this for someone else...does it come with everything he'll need to plug in and run it?
external 100 zip drive with plpconnection, is there a cable to use the drive with a cable, plp to usb?
Reviews
3.9
All from verified purchases
J**0
Quiet - not noisy like more-recent versions.
This translucent-blue square-edged old-style Iomega Zip 100 drive is quiet - it does *not* make irritating racket like some of the other, more recent, rounded-edge Iomega Zip drives. This translucent/clear-blue Iomega drive just makes a polite barely-audible tiny little whirring noise when it's accessing files, and it makes the standard 1999-era non-objectionable mild "thunk" when you eject a disk.So if you've ever owned one of the original Iomega Zip drives from back in the late 1990s, that's the same kind of nice sound that this one makes.Also, when you eject a disk from this drive, the disk doesn't go flying out of the drive like on some of the newer models - it only ejects far enough for you to reach it. Perfect.This Zip drive's case is sturdy and solid, seems well-built, not flimsy like some newer models.The quietness quality is exactly why I bought this Zip drive - to replace newer noisy ones that were waking up my neighbors (seriously). I've owned two of the noisy newer ones, and I'd had quite enough of them, so I am very happy to finally get ahold of another old-style traditional quiet Zip drive. (One of my noisy flimsy newer ones got accidently dropped onto a concrete floor and stopped working, and the other noisy newer one I will keep for a spare for future years' use, just in case.)At least in my case, the Zip drive being reviewed here, works perfectly in both Microsoft Windows XP Pro and Ubuntu 10.10 (Linux). No bugs, no glitches, just good solid performance. The PC that I have this Zip drive hooked up to, dual-boots to both Ubuntu and XP Pro, and the Zip drive works fine with both of those OS's.I use Zip drives for occasional file transfers between a fairly-modern low-end PC (for internet and coding) and an antique Mac (which is used for image editing). The ancient Mac has no USB capability, but it has its own separate SCSI Zip drive built-in, which makes it easy to use the exact same Zip *disks* on both the PC and the Mac (the Mac reads/writes to PC-formatted disks). Due to the huge difference in ages of the operating-systems I run, for me to try to do something fancy like "network" the machines would be beyond my meager technical abilities (or lack of), and the old Mac isn't suitable for online/internet use anymore, so I depend on Zip disks for an occasional (once a week or so) small file transfer between machines. I will probably still be using Zip disks for years to come, given the financial investments I have in legacy high-end software (which only runs on the old hardware). Zip disks keep me from having to spend $10,000.00 on an entirely new equivalent system+software+peripherals, and the old stuff still works just like new.Under Windows XP, for the Zip drive being reviewed here, you can optionally install the Iomega software (comes on a CD included with the Zip drive, or at least it does if you're buying one of the new factory-sealed drives - however, used/second-hand models might or might not have the CD but you can probably download the software from Iomega or someplace) or you can ignore the Iomega software - Windows XP can use the Zip drive without any extra drivers (the drivers are apparently already built into Windows somehow). Although if you want to do stuff like long format+verify of your Zip disks (good to do once a year or so, as preventative maintenance), you would have to install the Iomega software to do that, because Windows doesn't do the normal *thorough* Iomega 8-minute format+verify on Zip disks. But it does everything else just fine.Under Ubuntu 10.10, this Zip drive is also recognized and fully functional, without having to install any drivers or software, and no need for any command-line wizardry either. I haven't tried hot-swapping the Zip drive; I plugged in this Zip drive first, then booted (started) the computer, and the Zip drive is instantly recognized and ready for use. However, I don't know if there's any way to do the 8-minute long-format-and-verify of Zip disks in Ubuntu. My Zip disks are PC-formatted, but Ubuntu reads/writes to them just fine. NOTE: Seems that if your Zip disks are *Mac* formatted, Ubuntu 10.10 has permissions problems and mounts the disks as read-only - it can read the files but not modify/add/delete files - there might be some workaround for that but I'm not technically knowledgable enough (nor sufficiently motivated) to figure that out. Anyway, Ubuntu works fine with *PC-formatted* Zip disks, and since the old Mac also can read/write PC-formatted Zip disks (via, in my case, the Apple "PC Exchange" control panel (see footnote below) in Mac OS 8.1, and the Mac's own *separate* SCSI Zip drive), the Zip *disks* serve as a nice simple fuss-free way to transfer files to/from a USB-equipped modern PC and a non-USB antique Mac. If you're trying to set up something like this, don't forget that you'll need *two* Zip *drives* - a USB Zip drive (like the one I'm reviewing here on this page) for the modern computer, *and* a separate non-USB Zip drive (most likely SCSI for antique Macs, I-dunno-what for antique PCs) for the antique computer.This Zip drive being reviewed here, was manufactured during the era where I assume it is probably USB 1 or one-point-something, but it works just fine with my USB 2.x PC - USB is pretty excellent with handling "backward-compatibility" things like that. The write speed should theoretically be slower but I haven't really noticed any difference. Let's face it, these Zip disks only hold 100 MB anyway, actually more like 95 MB or so after formatting, so it's not like you're going to be putting gigantic files on 'em anyway. So the difference in speed, between USB 1 and USB 2, isn't really a noticeable issue with Zip drives.One other note:I have been a regular user of Zip drives and Zip disks since the late 1990s and, for some reason I have never experienced (knock on wood) the infamous Iomega "click of death" that some people have experienced. I don't know why. Maybe because I long-format my Zip disks at least once a year just as prevention, or maybe because they aren't in a dusty or hot environment, or maybe because they're only used between two Zip drives and not bounced around between dozens of 'em, or maybe because they only get ejected/inserted a few times a week at the most (thus not wearing out the mechanism), or maybe just luck. Although I wouldn't recommend using any single media-type as your only backup (redundancy is always good, for backups, just in case one method fails), but for my uses, Zip disks have been, are still are, a reasonably-reliable and definitely-easy file-transfer method.Of course, if *all* your computers have USB, just use USB thumb-drives instead of Zip drives. :)Oh, one other thing, in case other people haven't already mentioned this (I haven't yet read *all* the other reviews here, will do that later) - this particular Zip drive has (or at least, is *supposed* to have) its own separate power-supply that you plug into a regular A/C outlet, so the drive has its own power, rather than being USB-powered. This is probably a good thing because if you already have tons of stuff plugged into your USB ports (using multiple low-cost non-powered USB hubs), this way you don't have to worry about putting too much electrical drain on your USB ports. No need for a "powered usb hub" or anything. I happen to be running this particular USB Zip drive off of a USB hub that has other things plugged into it too, although I read someplace once that sometimes you have to plug certain things directly into a port on the computer, instead of using a hub... works good either way for me, though.____* FOOTNOTE:With regards to the Apple "PC Exchange" control panel on antique Macs, in my case there was a conflict between it and (ironically) the Mac version of Microsoft Internet Explorer 5 web-browser. The workaround, since the old Mac isn't used for internet/online stuff anymore anyway, was just to disable most of the IE-related extensions in the System Folder, and that solved the problem. Now the old Mac can read/write PC-formatted disks again, including Zip disks - on its own separate SCSI Zip drive, not the one being reviewed here, but Zip *disks* can be transferred to any Zip drive on any computer, including the Zip drive being reviewed here. This is relevant to this review because of the legacy aspects of all this equipment, including Zip disks and their usefulness for transferring files between old and new computers of different types. :)------** EDITED to reflect the fact that the Zip drive I'm reviewing here, was new factory-sealed in the original box (pretty amazing considering that I purchased it in April 2011), had not been previously used, and all the parts were there that were supposed to be there. I don't know if that matters *except* when it comes to things that (in my case) were included with this particular Zip drive, such as the power supply (REQUIRED) and the CD (optional). Trying to future-proof :) this review, if you choose to buy one of the various used/second-hand models instead of one of the new-in-original-box models (depending on what's available), you might or might not get those other items such as power-supply and CD - ask whichever seller you're buying from, if it isn't already specified on the Amazon page... these things tend to change fairly quickly.
T**T
Thank God I can retrieve my old zip100 disks.
Back in 1998, I put all my music data on zip100 disks. I had a parallel/SCSI iomega zip 100 drive which I connected to my korg trinity and my win98 PC. Since then the drive broke, then another one I bought at a garage sale broke, so I gave up and left the zip disks in the closet for 15 years. A month ago I decided to try to resurrect my data, so I bought two parallel/SCSI iomega zip100s on ebay only to discover that 1) the SCSI connection on my korg has broken, and 2) no modern PC has a parallel/SCSI port. So I was this close to being SOL. Fortunately I found this USB version, and it WORKS. I attached it to my ubuntu linux machine, mounted the disks and copied all the data over along with full disk images. This thing saved something priceless that I thought I'd lost forever. Thank you!
C**A
I lost a pretty penny
The drive DID NOT connect to my Mac Studio. No icon appeared on my Mac Studio screen. The drive DID NOT have a way of removing the disk with a paper clip. I had to desroy the unit entirely to recover my disk. The whole thing went to the trash can and I lost the money I paid for this useless thing.
G**R
5 Stars because it works great but....
In part, I bought this to access photo files I had backed up on an old parallel port zip drive years ago. It plugged right into my Mac Book and ran fine. While I can read and write files to disks, I can't see my old files. Info correctly shows that the disk was formatted as a FAT 16 and has some 45 meg of space used, which would be my photos but that's it. I even tried plugging it into my wife's old Windows machine and it shows the some thing - the space is used but no files. Otherwise the drive works as advertised.
R**R
This item worked just fine. I used to have a computer with a ...
This item worked just fine. I used to have a computer with a built in Iomega Zip 100, but it crashed and burned . After 3 moves, and years later, I came across 4 of the discs in a box. That is why I bought this drive. I knew I had some missing documents etc, but I was extra pleased when one of my discs had a couple hundred pics of my children when they were small children. The ex-wife got all the photos and would not split them even with a court order so I had very few pics. Now I have a couple of years worth of pics. I am very happy this drive worked for me.
A**R
Life Saver
Iomega Zip 100 Portable USB Drive (PC/Mac): When my old computer that crashed and died, it took my documents and its zip drive with it. When I got my shiny, new computer and saw zip drives were no longer in use, I wondered how I was going to retrieve my documents. Who, me, panic? My local computer guru couldn't help. A computer retrieval service was astronomically priced with no assurances. Finally, my local computer guru suggested looking online to see if I could find a portable hard drive. Good idea. With this purchase, I was able to recover all my old documents and add them to my new computer with ease. Jackpot!
C**G
Amazing. It's great when obsolete technology saves the day!
Was sort of perfect for my needs: Using an obsolete storage system to take obsolete writing files from an older MAC and copy them to an eMAC. I then had to convert to a current word processing software, OpenSource.Org and then my intent was to plug this Zip Drive into my iMac and copy all those newly translated files to the iMac. But for some reason my iMac couldn't "see" or read the Iomega Zip Drive (it "saw" it at the USB Hub). So I had to buy a flash drive to copy those files from the eMac. Then I was able to copy to the iMac from the flash drive. (Their Customer Support said the drive had been tested through MAC OS 10.6 and it worked fine [have 10.7.5, Mountain Lion]). In a round about way, the technology served its purpose! Thank goodness. (The Seller was quick in responding to my questions. Good Customer Service.)
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Yusuf A.
Fantastic experience overall. Will recommend to friends and family.
1 month ago
Pooja R.
The customer service exceeded my expectations. Perfect for buying products you can't find elsewhere.
The Iomega Zip drive is the low-cost removable storage leader--and Iomega's two latest offerings, the Zip 250 (a SCSI device) and a USB version of the Zip 100, should help maintain its popularity. The USB drive is designed for Win98; you install the drivers and IomegaWare software first, then reboot your system. We got it installed and performing without a hitch.
We tested the SCSI version of the Zip 250. The 250 MB disks will sell for about $100 for a six pack, about the same as a 10 pack of Zip 100 disks. The drive works with the 100 MB disks, but sacrifices some speed in doing so.
We compared both drives' performance against an internal IDE Zip 100 drive (0.32MBps). The Zip 100 copied our files at 0.25MBps. The Zip 250's SCSI interface helped it achieve good speeds (0.52MBps) with a 250MB disk for which it's optimized. The performance of the Zip 250 drive earns it a spot on our WinList. -- From Winmag®
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This translucent/clear-blue Iomega drive just makes a polite barely-audible tiny little whirring noise when it's accessing files, and it makes the standard 1999-era non-objectionable mild \"thunk\" when you eject a disk.So if you've ever owned one of the original Iomega Zip drives from back in the late 1990s, that's the same kind of nice sound that this one makes.Also, when you eject a disk from this drive, the disk doesn't go flying out of the drive like on some of the newer models - it only ejects far enough for you to reach it. Perfect.This Zip drive's case is sturdy and solid, seems well-built, not flimsy like some newer models.The quietness quality is exactly why I bought this Zip drive - to replace newer noisy ones that were waking up my neighbors (seriously). I've owned two of the noisy newer ones, and I'd had quite enough of them, so I am very happy to finally get ahold of another old-style traditional quiet Zip drive. (One of my noisy flimsy newer ones got accidently dropped onto a concrete floor and stopped working, and the other noisy newer one I will keep for a spare for future years' use, just in case.)At least in my case, the Zip drive being reviewed here, works perfectly in both Microsoft Windows XP Pro and Ubuntu 10.10 (Linux). No bugs, no glitches, just good solid performance. The PC that I have this Zip drive hooked up to, dual-boots to both Ubuntu and XP Pro, and the Zip drive works fine with both of those OS's.I use Zip drives for occasional file transfers between a fairly-modern low-end PC (for internet and coding) and an antique Mac (which is used for image editing). The ancient Mac has no USB capability, but it has its own separate SCSI Zip drive built-in, which makes it easy to use the exact same Zip *disks* on both the PC and the Mac (the Mac reads/writes to PC-formatted disks). Due to the huge difference in ages of the operating-systems I run, for me to try to do something fancy like \"network\" the machines would be beyond my meager technical abilities (or lack of), and the old Mac isn't suitable for online/internet use anymore, so I depend on Zip disks for an occasional (once a week or so) small file transfer between machines. I will probably still be using Zip disks for years to come, given the financial investments I have in legacy high-end software (which only runs on the old hardware). Zip disks keep me from having to spend $10,000.00 on an entirely new equivalent system+software+peripherals, and the old stuff still works just like new.Under Windows XP, for the Zip drive being reviewed here, you can optionally install the Iomega software (comes on a CD included with the Zip drive, or at least it does if you're buying one of the new factory-sealed drives - however, used/second-hand models might or might not have the CD but you can probably download the software from Iomega or someplace) or you can ignore the Iomega software - Windows XP can use the Zip drive without any extra drivers (the drivers are apparently already built into Windows somehow). Although if you want to do stuff like long format+verify of your Zip disks (good to do once a year or so, as preventative maintenance), you would have to install the Iomega software to do that, because Windows doesn't do the normal *thorough* Iomega 8-minute format+verify on Zip disks. But it does everything else just fine.Under Ubuntu 10.10, this Zip drive is also recognized and fully functional, without having to install any drivers or software, and no need for any command-line wizardry either. I haven't tried hot-swapping the Zip drive; I plugged in this Zip drive first, then booted (started) the computer, and the Zip drive is instantly recognized and ready for use. However, I don't know if there's any way to do the 8-minute long-format-and-verify of Zip disks in Ubuntu. My Zip disks are PC-formatted, but Ubuntu reads/writes to them just fine. NOTE: Seems that if your Zip disks are *Mac* formatted, Ubuntu 10.10 has permissions problems and mounts the disks as read-only - it can read the files but not modify/add/delete files - there might be some workaround for that but I'm not technically knowledgable enough (nor sufficiently motivated) to figure that out. Anyway, Ubuntu works fine with *PC-formatted* Zip disks, and since the old Mac also can read/write PC-formatted Zip disks (via, in my case, the Apple \"PC Exchange\" control panel (see footnote below) in Mac OS 8.1, and the Mac's own *separate* SCSI Zip drive), the Zip *disks* serve as a nice simple fuss-free way to transfer files to/from a USB-equipped modern PC and a non-USB antique Mac. If you're trying to set up something like this, don't forget that you'll need *two* Zip *drives* - a USB Zip drive (like the one I'm reviewing here on this page) for the modern computer, *and* a separate non-USB Zip drive (most likely SCSI for antique Macs, I-dunno-what for antique PCs) for the antique computer.This Zip drive being reviewed here, was manufactured during the era where I assume it is probably USB 1 or one-point-something, but it works just fine with my USB 2.x PC - USB is pretty excellent with handling \"backward-compatibility\" things like that. The write speed should theoretically be slower but I haven't really noticed any difference. Let's face it, these Zip disks only hold 100 MB anyway, actually more like 95 MB or so after formatting, so it's not like you're going to be putting gigantic files on 'em anyway. So the difference in speed, between USB 1 and USB 2, isn't really a noticeable issue with Zip drives.One other note:I have been a regular user of Zip drives and Zip disks since the late 1990s and, for some reason I have never experienced (knock on wood) the infamous Iomega \"click of death\" that some people have experienced. I don't know why. Maybe because I long-format my Zip disks at least once a year just as prevention, or maybe because they aren't in a dusty or hot environment, or maybe because they're only used between two Zip drives and not bounced around between dozens of 'em, or maybe because they only get ejected/inserted a few times a week at the most (thus not wearing out the mechanism), or maybe just luck. Although I wouldn't recommend using any single media-type as your only backup (redundancy is always good, for backups, just in case one method fails), but for my uses, Zip disks have been, are still are, a reasonably-reliable and definitely-easy file-transfer method.Of course, if *all* your computers have USB, just use USB thumb-drives instead of Zip drives. :)Oh, one other thing, in case other people haven't already mentioned this (I haven't yet read *all* the other reviews here, will do that later) - this particular Zip drive has (or at least, is *supposed* to have) its own separate power-supply that you plug into a regular A/C outlet, so the drive has its own power, rather than being USB-powered. This is probably a good thing because if you already have tons of stuff plugged into your USB ports (using multiple low-cost non-powered USB hubs), this way you don't have to worry about putting too much electrical drain on your USB ports. No need for a \"powered usb hub\" or anything. I happen to be running this particular USB Zip drive off of a USB hub that has other things plugged into it too, although I read someplace once that sometimes you have to plug certain things directly into a port on the computer, instead of using a hub... works good either way for me, though.____* FOOTNOTE:With regards to the Apple \"PC Exchange\" control panel on antique Macs, in my case there was a conflict between it and (ironically) the Mac version of Microsoft Internet Explorer 5 web-browser. The workaround, since the old Mac isn't used for internet/online stuff anymore anyway, was just to disable most of the IE-related extensions in the System Folder, and that solved the problem. Now the old Mac can read/write PC-formatted disks again, including Zip disks - on its own separate SCSI Zip drive, not the one being reviewed here, but Zip *disks* can be transferred to any Zip drive on any computer, including the Zip drive being reviewed here. This is relevant to this review because of the legacy aspects of all this equipment, including Zip disks and their usefulness for transferring files between old and new computers of different types. :)------** EDITED to reflect the fact that the Zip drive I'm reviewing here, was new factory-sealed in the original box (pretty amazing considering that I purchased it in April 2011), had not been previously used, and all the parts were there that were supposed to be there. I don't know if that matters *except* when it comes to things that (in my case) were included with this particular Zip drive, such as the power supply (REQUIRED) and the CD (optional). Trying to future-proof :) this review, if you choose to buy one of the various used/second-hand models instead of one of the new-in-original-box models (depending on what's available), you might or might not get those other items such as power-supply and CD - ask whichever seller you're buying from, if it isn't already specified on the Amazon page... these things tend to change fairly quickly."},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"5.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"T***T"},"datePublished":"July 24, 2021","name":"Thank God I can retrieve my old zip100 disks.","reviewBody":"Back in 1998, I put all my music data on zip100 disks. I had a parallel/SCSI iomega zip 100 drive which I connected to my korg trinity and my win98 PC. Since then the drive broke, then another one I bought at a garage sale broke, so I gave up and left the zip disks in the closet for 15 years. A month ago I decided to try to resurrect my data, so I bought two parallel/SCSI iomega zip100s on ebay only to discover that 1) the SCSI connection on my korg has broken, and 2) no modern PC has a parallel/SCSI port. So I was this close to being SOL. Fortunately I found this USB version, and it WORKS. I attached it to my ubuntu linux machine, mounted the disks and copied all the data over along with full disk images. This thing saved something priceless that I thought I'd lost forever. Thank you!"},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"1.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"C***A"},"datePublished":"December 5, 2024","name":"I lost a pretty penny","reviewBody":"The drive DID NOT connect to my Mac Studio. No icon appeared on my Mac Studio screen. The drive DID NOT have a way of removing the disk with a paper clip. I had to desroy the unit entirely to recover my disk. The whole thing went to the trash can and I lost the money I paid for this useless thing."},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"5.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"G***R"},"datePublished":"December 27, 2017","name":"5 Stars because it works great but....","reviewBody":"In part, I bought this to access photo files I had backed up on an old parallel port zip drive years ago. It plugged right into my Mac Book and ran fine. While I can read and write files to disks, I can't see my old files. Info correctly shows that the disk was formatted as a FAT 16 and has some 45 meg of space used, which would be my photos but that's it. I even tried plugging it into my wife's old Windows machine and it shows the some thing - the space is used but no files. Otherwise the drive works as advertised."},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"4.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"R***R"},"datePublished":"November 3, 2014","name":"This item worked just fine. I used to have a computer with a ...","reviewBody":"This item worked just fine. I used to have a computer with a built in Iomega Zip 100, but it crashed and burned . After 3 moves, and years later, I came across 4 of the discs in a box. That is why I bought this drive. I knew I had some missing documents etc, but I was extra pleased when one of my discs had a couple hundred pics of my children when they were small children. The ex-wife got all the photos and would not split them even with a court order so I had very few pics. Now I have a couple of years worth of pics. I am very happy this drive worked for me."},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"5.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"A***R"},"datePublished":"March 11, 2016","name":"Life Saver","reviewBody":"Iomega Zip 100 Portable USB Drive (PC/Mac): When my old computer that crashed and died, it took my documents and its zip drive with it. When I got my shiny, new computer and saw zip drives were no longer in use, I wondered how I was going to retrieve my documents. Who, me, panic? My local computer guru couldn't help. A computer retrieval service was astronomically priced with no assurances. Finally, my local computer guru suggested looking online to see if I could find a portable hard drive. Good idea. With this purchase, I was able to recover all my old documents and add them to my new computer with ease. Jackpot!"},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"3.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"C***G"},"datePublished":"October 7, 2013","name":"Amazing. It's great when obsolete technology saves the day!","reviewBody":"Was sort of perfect for my needs: Using an obsolete storage system to take obsolete writing files from an older MAC and copy them to an eMAC. I then had to convert to a current word processing software, OpenSource.Org and then my intent was to plug this Zip Drive into my iMac and copy all those newly translated files to the iMac. But for some reason my iMac couldn't \"see\" or read the Iomega Zip Drive (it \"saw\" it at the USB Hub). So I had to buy a flash drive to copy those files from the eMac. Then I was able to copy to the iMac from the flash drive. (Their Customer Support said the drive had been tested through MAC OS 10.6 and it worked fine [have 10.7.5, Mountain Lion]). In a round about way, the technology served its purpose! Thank goodness. (The Seller was quick in responding to my questions. Good Customer Service.)"}],"aggregateRating":{"@type":"AggregateRating","ratingValue":4,"bestRating":5,"ratingCount":7}},{"@type":"FAQPage","mainEntity":[{"@type":"Question","name":"Is this easy to use?","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"It is extremely easy to use. Just plug it in to an outlet, plug in the usb cable into the computer port, turn it on and it will show up as an external drive on “my computer.” Of course you will need the memory discs to plug into the drive."}},{"@type":"Question","name":"I have many zip disks to recover data from. these descriptions are not direct and confusing. is there a usb cable that will go to an apple computer?","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"I purchased a zip drive, complete with cables, from Amazon. I hooked it up to my work Mac OS X, Version 10.8.5, and it was incompatible.So I took everything home and hooked up to my old, 2003, iMac. It worked! I was able to retrieve data from the zips. The files must be dragged to the desktop and opened within the application file. I was able to open most PageMaker and Quark files with Indesign CC3."}},{"@type":"Question","name":"I'm buying this for someone else...does it come with everything he'll need to plug in and run it?","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"My recollection is that it comes ready to plug and play. I purchased mine to convert a few tens of zip disks to CD-ROM disks to exchange with family members."}},{"@type":"Question","name":"external 100 zip drive with plpconnection, is there a cable to use the drive with a cable, plp to usb?","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"Not sure what a plp is. The Zip Drive does come with a cable that connects it to a USB port on the computer. Hope this helps !"}}]}]}