So, I have a large collection of vintage Mac games, something in the
order of 160 or so, most of which are "big box" games, about half of
which are CD-ROM and the other half floppy disk. Sadly, but
inevitably, many of the floppy disks are now dead; they do not mount
to desktop. Seeing as they're all 30 or more years old, it's no
surprise that disk rot has finally got them, but still a bit sad.
It did make me wonder, though, is there any value in going to the
effort to restore the disks? I mean, I know the answer is "No, none whatsoever" but... the idea that these games are now little more than ornaments on my shelf rather than actual useable software depresses me
a little.
It should be trivial to find digital back-ups of these on the web but
are these disks physically beyond use now, or is it just data
corruption? If I were to format the disks, would I be able to place
the software back onto them?
So, I have a large collection of vintage Mac games, something in the
order of 160 or so, most of which are "big box" games, about half of
which are CD-ROM and the other half floppy disk. Sadly, but inevitably,
many of the floppy disks are now dead; they do not mount to desktop.
Seeing as they're all 30 or more years old, it's no surprise that disk
rot has finally got them, but still a bit sad.
It did make me wonder, though, is there any value in going to the
effort to restore the disks? I mean, I know the answer is "No, none whatsoever" but... the idea that these games are now little more than ornaments on my shelf rather than actual useable software depresses me
a little.
It should be trivial to find digital back-ups of these on the web but
are these disks physically beyond use now, or is it just data
corruption? If I were to format the disks, would I be able to place the software back onto them?
So, I have a large collection of vintage Mac games, something in the
order of 160 or so, most of which are "big box" games, about half of
which are CD-ROM and the other half floppy disk. Sadly, but inevitably,
many of the floppy disks are now dead; they do not mount to desktop.
Seeing as they're all 30 or more years old, it's no surprise that disk
rot has finally got them, but still a bit sad.
It did make me wonder, though, is there any value in going to the
effort to restore the disks? I mean, I know the answer is "No, none whatsoever" but... the idea that these games are now little more than ornaments on my shelf rather than actual useable software depresses me
a little.
It should be trivial to find digital back-ups of these on the web but
are these disks physically beyond use now, or is it just data
corruption? If I were to format the disks, would I be able to place the software back onto them?
It should be trivial to find digital back-ups of these on the web but
are these disks physically beyond use now, or is it just data
corruption? If I were to format the disks, would I be able to place the software back onto them?
scole wrote:
It should be trivial to find digital back-ups of these on the web but
are these disks physically beyond use now, or is it just data
corruption? If I were to format the disks, would I be able to place
the software back onto them?
In many cases I've found that I can clean the magnetic media (the
"cookie") and get a successful copy from Disk Copy 4.2. Have you ever
tried cleaning a floppy disk in this way? I've used the technique for
many 5.25" Apple II disks as well.
https://macgui.com/news/article.php?t=456
On 2024-06-17, D Finnigan <dog_cow@macgui.com> wrote:
scole wrote:
It should be trivial to find digital back-ups of these on the web but
are these disks physically beyond use now, or is it just data
corruption? If I were to format the disks, would I be able to place
the software back onto them?
In many cases I've found that I can clean the magnetic media (the
"cookie") and get a successful copy from Disk Copy 4.2. Have you ever
tried cleaning a floppy disk in this way? I've used the technique for
many 5.25" Apple II disks as well.
https://macgui.com/news/article.php?t=456
Back when computers used 5¼ floppy disks, my father taught me to use a similar method since the inside of the floppy jacket was soft fabric. In
some instances, we even removed the disks from their jackets completely, washed them in alcohol, allowed them to dry, and put them back into the jackets. We rescued many a floppy that way!
Of course that won't help if the data on the disk is corrupted due to magnetism and so on. In that case, the best you can do is erase,
reformat and restore the data from another source.
Not all floppy disks are created equal. When my spousal unit did customer support for an antivirus software company, she told of an infected disk received in the snail-mail (a normal occurrence back then), that after
being analyzed, could not be erased by any means, even after several
passes with a powerful magnet. They finally resorted to running the disk through the shredder.
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