- SuperDrive
SuperDrive is a trademark used by
Apple Inc. for two different storage drives: from 1988–1999 to refer to a high-densityfloppy disk drive capable of reading all major 3.5" disk formats; and from 2001 onwards to refer to a combinedCD /DVD reader/writer (and since 2006, the SuperDrive is also a double-layer DVD/CD burner).Floppy disk drive
The term was first used by
Apple Computer in1988 to refer to their 1.44 MB 3.5 inch floppy drive. This replaced the older 800 KB floppy drive that had been standard in the Macintosh up to then, but remained compatible in that it could continue to read and write both 800K (double-sided) and 400K (single-sided) floppy disks, as well as the then-new high-density floppies. This drive was also capable of reading and writing MS-DOS formatted disks with appropriate software, unlike the 400K and 800K drives. This was made possible as the SuperDrive now utilitized the same MFM (Modified Frequency Modulation) encoding scheme used by theIBM PC, yet still retained backward compatibility with Apple's variable-speedzoned CAV scheme andGroup Code Recording encoding format, so it could continue to read Macintosh MFS, HFS andApple II ProDOS formats on 400/800K disks.Introduced in
1988 under the Trademark name "FDHD" (Floppy Disk High Density), the subsequently renamed SuperDrive was known primarily as an internalized floppy drive that was a built in part of the Macintosh computer; however, an external version of the drive was manufactured that came in a Snow White-styled plastic case. While the external drive worked on both Apple's product lines, it was mainly intended for use on the Apple II series, for which Apple introduced in 1991 a slot-based interface called the Apple II 3.5 Disk Controller Card forApple IIe and IIGS computers so they too could use 1.4 MB storage and read/write MS-DOS. The controller card as well as the external Superdrive were discontinued in June 1994. The SuperDrive cannot be used with the originalMacintosh 128K throughMacintosh Plus , nor with the stockMacintosh II orMacintosh SE (for which an upgrade kit was available), though it will act like an 800K drive if connected.The first
Macintosh model to include a SuperDrive floppy drive was theMacintosh IIx . EveryMacintosh andPowerBook introduced from 1988-1997 (with the exception of thePowerBook 100 ,PowerBook Duo series, andPowerBook 2400c , which offered a proprietary external floppy drive as an option), had a built-in SuperDrive floppy drive (advertised as a 1.44 MB floppy drive).Fact|date=February 2008 The last model to include this feature was thePower Macintosh G3 series, which was manufactured until January 1999. ThePowerBook G3 1998 model, (a.k.a. Wallstreet) had an optional floppy drive module. ThePowerBook 190 series,PowerBook 5300 Series,PowerBook 3400c , and originalPowerBook G3 shared the same interchangeable floppy drive module as a standard feature. ThePowerBook 1400 series also had a floppy drive module, but was incompatible with the other PowerBooks.CD and DVD drive
Once use of floppy disks started declining, Apple reused the trademark to refer to the (originally Pioneer-built) DVD writers built into its Macintosh models, which can read and write both DVDs and CDs. As of December 2006, SuperDrives are combination DVD±R/±RW and CD-R/RW writer drives offering speeds of 4x-36xFact|date=August 2007 and supporting the
DVD±R ,DVD+R DL ,DVD-R DL ,DVD±RW ,DVD-9 ,CD-R , andCD-RW formats along with all normal read-only media.ee also
*
SuperDisk - a format designed byImation as a successor to the floppy disk.
*Super Multi - a type of DVD drive that can read and write all DVD formats.
*Combo drive - an optical drive that can read and write CDs and reads DVDs
*MacBook Air - a laptop made by Apple that utilizes Apple's first external USB SuperDrive
*Timeline of Apple products External links
* [http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2001/feb/19super.html Apple Ships Industry's First SuperDrive]
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