• A Blast From The Past

    From John Dulak@Johnd@Booogus.com to comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage on Tue May 21 08:30:19 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage

    A blast from the past ;-)

    https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20240510-floppy-disks-why-some-people-are-still-in-love-with-this-obsolete-computer-storage-technology

    John
    --
    \\\||/// ------------------o000----(o)(o)----000o---------------- ----------------------------()--------------------------
    '' Madness takes its toll - Please have exact change. ''

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  • From Kyonshi@gmkeros@gmail.com to comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage on Wed May 22 15:27:19 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage

    On 5/21/2024 2:30 PM, John Dulak wrote:
    A blast from the past ;-)

    https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20240510-floppy-disks-why-some-people-are-still-in-love-with-this-obsolete-computer-storage-technology

    John

    is any technology ever really obsolete?

    (except the Zune. That one was obsolete the week before it came out)
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  • From John Dulak@Johnd@Booogus.com to comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage on Wed May 22 10:10:13 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage

    On 5/22/2024 9:27 AM, Kyonshi wrote:
    On 5/21/2024 2:30 PM, John Dulak wrote:
    A blast from the past ;-)

    https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20240510-floppy-disks-why-some-people-are-still-in-love-with-this-obsolete-computer-storage-technology


    John

    is any technology ever really obsolete?

    (except the Zune. That one was obsolete the week before it came out)


    Kyonshi:

    FWIIW I still have floppy disks. Both 5-1/4 inch and 3-1/2 inch and the drives that can read them. I admit I rarely use them since USB "sticks" are easier and
    roomier.

    When I worked at Extrel there was a roll out of a new software package and various people were asked to evaluate sections of the package. Since changes to
    one part often were reflected in another part of the program there was value in
    keeping only *one copy* of the update to the software so the programmers did not
    get "lost in the woods" of many changes. The solution was to keep the software update on a single floppy disk known internally as "Sneaker Net".

    We also had some old systems that used 8 inch floppies. When customers asked for
    software changes they had to send Extrel one of their disks. People are NOT going to throw away a half million dollar machine just because they can't find a
    floppy disk to enter instructions!!

    On one of my gigs at Extrel after I retired one of the electronics engineers told me that one of his oscilloscopes had a "storage" function that allowed him
    to save a waveform to a floppy disk to archive performance. Since floppies were
    getting scarce he was thinking of a new oscilloscope. We were able to track down
    a "Floppy to USB" converter that plugged into a floppy slot. The only down side
    was that the USB stick had to be partitioned and formatted to 1.44 MB. The files
    could then be transfered to a desktop PC.

    And so it goes...
    --
    \\\||/// ------------------o000----(o)(o)----000o---------------- ----------------------------()--------------------------
    '' Madness takes its toll - Please have exact change. ''

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