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All content on this site is provided by the Museum of Obsolete Media, curated by Jason Curtis. My sincerest thanks to Jason for providing me with the worthy challenge of exhibiting his work in the only appropriate way:
The Floppy Disk Museum: The Bootable Floppy edition!

SuperDisk (1997 - early 2000s)

SuperDisk (also known as LS-120, and later LS-240) was a high-capacity 3.5-inch floppy disk, introduced by Imation in 1997. Initially it has a capacity of 120 MB, but was later refined by Matsushita to hold 240 MB.

Like the Floptical disk, lasers guided the magnetic read/write head.

It was the same size and was backwards compatible with 720 KB and 1.44 MB 3.5-inch floppy disks, but not with older Macintosh-formatted diskettes.

Iomega’s Zip Drive had also been on the market for several years when it was launched, and there was little interest in the SuperDisk system, especially when prices of CD-R and CD-RW drives and USB flash drives fell, and it was discontinued in the early 2000s.

The SuperDisk LS-120 was briefly used in a couple of Panasonic digital cameras, the Panasonic PalmCam PV-SD4090 and PV-SD5000 of 2000.

Figures

Dimensions: 94 mm x 90 mm x 3.3 mm

Capacity: 120 MB to 240 MB