"The Home Media Network Drive does the serious work of backing up and protecting digital files, but it also does the fun things like streaming photos and videos to game consoles, digital picture frames and networked TVs, as well as automatically feeding music into iTunes(R) for easy playback - all for little more than the cost of a USB direct-attached desktop hard drive with comparable storage capacity." "Iomega's new Home Media Network Hard Drive is a powerful network storage device that's so straightforward that even a novice can be backing up multiple computers and streaming media around their home in less than five minutes," said Jonathan Huberman, president of Iomega and the Consumer and Small Business Products Division of EMC. Sharing and streaming multimedia files to a home entertainment system creates lots of enjoyment for the whole family, and the 1TB Home Media Network Hard Drive can store plenty of entertainment - more than 4 million photos, 18,500 hours of music, or 1500 hours of video.**
Consumers with multiple computers can use the Home Media Network Hard Drive to centralize their computer storage as well as access files on everything from a laptop to a big screen TV to a Microsoft Xbox 360 or a Sony PlayStation 3. Starting at just $159.99, the Home Media Network Hard Drive is available as a 500GB or a 1TB single-drive device. © Cristalink Pty Ltd, 2017.Iomega will be showing the new Home Media Network Hard Drive at the MacWorld tradeshow in San Francisco, January 6-9, 2009, and at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, January 8-11, 2009. This page is protected by Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) Direct-access media (HDD, RDX, flash memory).Types of Drive Mediaįirestreamer supports drive media of the following types: You can view the drive letter, interface name and volume name of a drive medium in the Add Drive Media form. Note that a non-persistent device name may change when the computer is restarted. The non-persistent device name (for example, \Device\CdRom0).For example, different hard disk drives connected one at a time to the same USB external enclosure will have different volume names. The volume name is associated with the medium's partition and will change if the medium is reformatted. The interface name (for example, \?\IDE#CdRomNEC-IDE-CDR00#).Depending on your particular hardware, different media drives may or may not be assigned the same drive letter when connected one at a time. Medium NameIn the initial media layout, you can use any of the following values as the name of a drive medium:
Because such software may sometimes cause adverse effects, we recommend that you do not install it unless needed. In most cases, Firestreamer does not need any software, including device drivers, that may come with your media drives. If it is not done and the computer is restarted, the blank drive media will receive new temporary bar codes, and your backup software may fail if it has not inventoried the tape library and is still expecting the bar codes that were in effect before the restart. This operation causes tape labels to be written to the media, which in turn also permanently associates the newly created temporary bar codes with the media.
IMPORTANT: If you load blank drive media into a tape library, and the media is not intended for immediate use, we recommend that you mark the media as free in your backup software.
For convenience reasons, you should attach a label with the bar code to the medium. When used for the first time, a drive medium is assigned a unique bar code. Firestreamer accesses drive media in raw mode without any file system involved tape data blocks directly correspond to data sectors of the medium. The drive medium is an ordinary physical storage medium. Problem: Unable to Access the Firestreamer Storage Controller Direct-Access Media (HDD, RDX, Flash Memory)