More interesting news: Manufacturers of microdrives purposely disable them..................from
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MicrodriveMaybe you guys are getting these microdrives..........
* Microdrives are found in the recently discontinued iPod mini and Zen Micro mp3 players, among others. Companies making such players order the Microdrives in large quantities, which can mean that it is cheaper to buy a mp3 player with an integrated Microdrive than a separate Microdrive to add to an expandable mp3 player. An example is the Creative MuVo; many of these were bought up by those interested in purchasing a Microdrive and stripped for their Microdrive which was then replaced by a lower capacity CompactFlash card.
* When combined with a PCMCIA adaptor and used in a laptop Microdrives can be a viable alternative to USB flash memory sticks purely due to their price. The use of Microdrives over chip-based CF cards is unlikely to make any notable difference to the battery life of the laptop, and any impact that would damage the Microdrive is likely to break other components of the laptop as well. However these cannot devices cannot be used with ordinary desktop PC's unless they are fitted with PCI PCMCIA adaptors or CF card readers.
Sometimes when a device with an integrated Microdrive stops working the device is taken apart and stripped of its Microdrive, which is then sold on. Unfortunately Microdrives taken from such devices may not work in digital cameras. The device must be accessed using ATA mode and therefore such drives do not fetch anywhere near as much as CF-enabled Microdrives as they cannot be used in devices that do not support ATA mode.
Ex-Navy