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Starting in 2014, Lenovo changed the design of the ThinkPad bay adapter and dropped the "UltraBay" terminology from use. What remained (in the ThinkPad W540 product) was an option for a removable Serial ATA (SATA) "Caddy" accessory which, with a screw driver, allowed the optical drive to be replaced with a second 2.5 inch SATA storage device.
Iomega Corporation (later LenovoEMC) [3] [4] [5] was a company that produced external, portable, and networked data storage products. Established in the 1980s in Roy, Utah, United States, Iomega sold more than 410 million digital storage drives and disks, including the Zip drive floppy disk system. [6]
It was common as it was shipped with a majority of CD and DVD recording drives, where DLA came as a custom OEM version for the branded drive. Also, most PC systems from Dell, HP, IBM, Sony and Toshiba came with DLA pre-installed. An OEM version was often available for download for the specific computer system.
Lenovo IdeaPad Y50 was released in the second quarter of 2014. Processor: 4th Gen Intel Core i7-4710HQ (2.5 GHz 1600 MT/s 6 MiB) Memory: up to 16 GiB PC3-12800 DDR3L SDRAM 1600 MT/s; Storage: 256 or 512 GB SSD, or 500 GB/1 TB 5400 RPM + 8 GB hybrid SSHD; Optical drive: External BD/DVD; Graphics: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 860M (2 GiB or 4 GiB GDDR5)
The M90 desktop was released by Lenovo in 2010 with the following specifications: Processor: 3.33 GHz Intel Core i5 [20] RAM: up to 4 GB DDR3 [20] Storage: up to 500 GB 7200 RPM SATA [20] Optical drive: DVD reader/writer [20] Graphics: Intel GMA X4500 [20] Form factor: Small form factor (SFF) [20] Dimensions (inches): 10.78 x 9.37 x 3.07 [20]
The TS200 was announced by Lenovo in September 2009, along with the RS210. [23] It was a tower server with the following specifications: [24] Processor: Intel Xeon X3450 (Quad-core 2.66 GHz) Chipset: Intel 3420; RAM: up to 32 GB DDR3 SDRAM ECC (6 slots) Optical drive: DVD reader/writer; Bays: four 3.5-inch hot-swap hard drives; Operating system:
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Because half-height demand much more electrical power and a voltage of 12 V DC, while slim optical drives run on 5 volts, external half height optical drives require separate external power input, while external slim type are usually able to operate entirely on power delivered through a computer's USB port. (In some slim drives, two USB ...