Combo
Drive is an ideal solution for much-needed additional storage and a
perfect place to back up your valuable data, music, photos and movies.
The world of writable and rewritable
storage has gone through many phases over the years, starting with the
initial foray into CDR and CDRW devices. These opened up a whole new
avenue of data storage and replication, and have essentially rendered
alternative hardware - such as ZIP and high-density floppy technologies -
virtually obsolete. This was a market shift that many foresaw, but few
understood how deeply it would be felt, and an entire market segment
disappeared in short order.
Soon after its introduction, the CDRW drive
became a de facto ingredient on high-performance systems, and we rapidly
moved up the CDR speed chart, from the initial 1X and 2X drives to today's
powerful 52X and even 54X drives. It was the same story with CDRW speeds,
with technology moving quick from 1X up to our current top-end of 32X CDRW.
Prices also moved opposite to drive speeds, and became so affordable that
even the low-end system market adopted basic CDRW drives as virtually
required equipment.
The rewritable storage market fell into
somewhat of a funk during the 48X CDR to 52X CDR speed increase, as
consumers had really hit the apex of their performance needs. Shaving a
few seconds off of write speeds didn't have the same allure as previous
incremental jumps, and drive manufacturers really needed new technologies,
and new formats to existing ones, to really capture consumer interest once
again.
The advent of DVD-R/RW and DVD +R+/+RW
technology supplied the first ingredient, and after an initial foray of
high-priced, low sales units, manufacturers have now moved to a
price-point more attractive to mass market consumers. The other important
shift was to take an all-in-one approach to CD and DVD storage, and
produce Combo Drives that not only handled the CDR/RW duties, but could
also take charge of CD and DVD reading as well. The benefits are clear, as
buying a single Combo Drive is less expensive than two devices, and these
single-drive units are also much more conducive to small form factor PCs.
The AOpen Candidates
To illustrate the various devices available
in the market, we've assembled a trio of AOpen drives. These cover the
gamut of rewritable storage features, technology and requirements, and
each serves a specific market segment. At the high-end, we've got the
AOpen DRW4410 DVD+RW/+R writer, while the mid-range and entry-level buyers
are covered off by the AOpen COM4824 Combo Drive and CRW5232 CDRW drive.
This not only gives us an opportunity to evaluate the actual hardware, but
to determine each where each device fits in, compared to system
architecture and budget requirements.
Makes Available For
Combo Drive
| Hewlett Packard |
Dell |
Toshiba |
| Addonics |
Samsung |
LG |
|