

- #SUPERDISK USB DRIVE INSTALL#
- #SUPERDISK USB DRIVE FULL#
- #SUPERDISK USB DRIVE WINDOWS 10#
- #SUPERDISK USB DRIVE SOFTWARE#
- #SUPERDISK USB DRIVE MAC#
Imation also offers IT administrators the industry’s most comprehensive device provisioning and management solutions with advanced features such as remote kill, device recycling, and compliance reporting.
#SUPERDISK USB DRIVE FULL#
Imation’s full line of secure data solutions – from USB flash drives to hard drives – allows IT administrators to provision employees with a wide array of manageable FIPS Level 3 validated secure USB devices, simplifying data security for travelers, teleworkers, and contractors. "Imation's encrypted personal storage solutions address what is often a neglected area for data security in organizations." "Many organizations have already taken steps to encrypt and protect data on disk drives used in notebook PCs, but now need to go one step further to encrypt and protect data on personal storage devices," said John Rydning, IDC's research vice president for hard disk drives. Our expanding secure hard drive offerings are in response to our customers needing increased capacity without compromising control over the devices and data.”

“People are increasingly turning to USB hard drives to transport large data sets. “Enterprise and government organizations increasingly need manageable USB devices in order to provide mobile workers with the tools necessary to work where and when they want, and access the data they need in the most secure way possible,” said Lawrence Reusing, Imation’s general manager for Mobile Security. Imation Corp., a global scalable storage and data security company, today announced the expansion of its secure USB hard drive line with capacities of up to 1 terabyte (TB), optional biometric fingerprint authentication, and a uniquely comprehensive set of options for secure USB hard drive management. Imation Expands Line of High-Capacity, High-Security, Hardware Encrypted USB HDDs
#SUPERDISK USB DRIVE MAC#
Is there a way to make it work or do I have to find Mac to connect it to?

Still, the device remains invisible in the file browser and after a bit it in the device manager it shows again the same problem "This device cannot start (code 10)."
#SUPERDISK USB DRIVE INSTALL#
On the Lenovo, I tried to force install the driver for Imation - SuperDisk LS120 - authenticated, and -not, and for a minute or two it shows the device in the list of USB devices in Device Manager. If I double-click on the device, it says: "This device cannot start (code 10)." an older Lenovo G70 running Windows 8, the device shows up on Device Manager as an ATAPI USB storage device with a problem.

If I double click it the following message comes up: "device descriptor request failed." On my device manager, it shows up as an " unknown USB device" with a problem.
#SUPERDISK USB DRIVE WINDOWS 10#
my Surface Book 2 with Windows 10 version 1803 build 17134.165 it won't recognize it. I'd be happy to sell you the drive and cable.I have just bought an Imation SuperDisk Drive LS120 (SD-USB-M), originally a Mac drive, on eBay since I have an old LS120 disk I need to access, but when I plug it on Unfortunately, somewhere along the way, something got damaged (probably the disk) because I never was able to read the files. I ended up having to build an old tower computer, find the right ribbon cable that allowed the atari-cart-like interface the 5 1/4" floppy drives had and an actual old heavy floppy drive. I made sure the PCs drive was still functional by using Winimage to burn(?) and then create/read another image off of a new floppy disk and compared the 2 images to make sure they were identical.Ī few years back I was asked to recover some data off a 5 1/4" disk for a customer. Then as mentioned above use the imgmount command with the option -t floppy If any of the disks have copy protection, the image files will retain their functionality that way.
#SUPERDISK USB DRIVE SOFTWARE#
The most commonly used software for that is Winimage. IMA format on a windows machine first (after vacuuming/blowing out the dust on it's floppy drive). What I'd do myself (and have done) is back them up to. They're common and cheap enough it's worth a shot. Then again, the usb drive might work excellently. I've had a lot of difficulty using Mac format floppy disks on my windows machines before, and had to use software specially made to interface with my floppy drive. I don't know about using a USB floppy drive on a Mac machine.
