Thanks Kelly,
I'll check them out.
I hope somebody might still write-in with a "real-world" reccomendation.
Themphill, the my short answer is YES we need one.
I have 15 -20 CDs loaded with stock photos that need to be shared among 4 designers. As well as an archive library of 20-30 CDs of past projects, templates and original art. The CD server would keep those darn disks from getting lost. Yeah, it'd be nice if we had a "check-out" system on paper, but this is the real world with "on-fire" emergencies", and over-worked staff that would have no desire to do it.
The ProCom unit I bought, on paper "sounded" like a dream come true! An ATX case with a proprietary motherboard with network card and OS that had an 8GB ATA drive with a 5 Disk Nakamichi CD drive. It was able to be administrated via it's small LED dispaly built in the case, or by a Windows based software, or by FTP Client or via any internet browser.
They way it worked is that you would "feed" the CDs into the machine which would create "virtual CD" copies on it's hard drive. You then could remove the real CDs and store them!
Well in practice it was a disaster. The machine at first would not support AppleTalk. Then after MONTHS of idle time that was resloved. Then Mac CDs "virtualized" lost all the "Desktop" info - all the files were generic, AND truncated to 8 characters - USELESS! A new "OS" was installed which almost fixed it, just a few "invisible" files show up, otherwise it does function.
Administering was a royal PAIN! Via browser it was slow and tortureous! And then I discovered that the 5 Slot drive could not share the CDs in it. So that meant I could store about 10 CDs on it! And according to ProCom the ATA drive is NOT expandable.
Ahhhh I feel better now after that rant!