The concept is simple. Take a hard drive that holds 35Gb, remove the heads (placing them in the machine) so it can be thrown around the office and then imply that this is the next big portable and removable storage solution.
In practice, luckily for Iomega the small desktop unit works. Connection is made via a USB2.0 cable and the drive
itself is capable of a 7200RPM- meaning data transfer is fast and efficient. The diskettes- that cost £45 each- support
Windows UDF standard allowing you to simply drag and drop files on to them and the speed is almost as fast as a hard
drive. The drag and drop functionality as well as the large hard drive based format does provide its fair share of
problems - mainly that it does not work cross platform. Iomega suggest that a Mac version will be launching with
Firewire support rather than USB2.0 in September, but that you will not be able to share diskettes between the two.
The disks are the bit to get excited about if you are one that easily gets excited by storage solutions and they smaller than the current zip disk, but slightly bigger than the old Game Boy game cartridges.
Because Iomega are gunning for the backup sector rather
than to replace the Zip market just yet the software in the box is geared to backing up your PC. Included in the box is
Iomega's own backup solution- Automatic Backup Pro and a specialised version of Symantec's Norton Ghost designed
specifically for the REV drive. Both packages are ample enough to provide backup support, however Iomega's own branded
software will easily be enough for the small office worker looking to backup their work. Based on wizards you can opt
to backup your data everytime the data changes to scheduling a backup every week without the need to remember when to
do it. Yo can also have it save limited revisions of the files- ideal if you've got a bunch of staff who are delete
mad.
VERDICT
At £280 the initial outlay is certainly more expensive than buying a 250Gb portable hard drive however it is
clear that Iomega are pitching this to the tape market looking to save the data and then perhaps store it off site.
It's a shame that the drives are incompatible between Mac and PC operating systems, but then if this system has been
designed for back-up rather than replacing the Zip disk, perhaps those worries are unfounded.
More interesting is that the technology has been road mapped up to 500Gb on one disk, hopefully keeping the same form factor, with Iomega again hoping to get there by 2009 (they plan to double the size of the disk capacity every 18 months). Getting companies to move away from the safety of the tape drive will be a hard task, this is a good solid product that might just get them to go digital. µ
Review kindly supplied by Pocket-Lint