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What's a floppy disk?
We were cleaning out the office and had a stack of 3.5" disks. My 9 year old asks "What's this for?" and my 14 year old tells him "It's kind of like a USB flash drive".
Man, I'm old... |
Hahah, yeah, you should find and show them an old 5.25" floppy back when they actually were.
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I've heard/read somewhere that in Australia or the UK they call 3.5" disks "stiffies".
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I may have some 8"ers around the office.
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So is a 12" floppy better than a 8" stiffie?
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What's a floppy disk?
It's a disk that hasn't seen Taylor Swift yet... |
Hate to admit it, but my first job in college was inventory control using punch cards and an IBM sorter.
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My first college class was Fortan with punch cards.
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was telling my Niece about my 8-track unit..
in my so loved 69 Chevelle... her ?, did that make it go faster... Rika |
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Here in SoCal, the Craig 4-track had much better sound quality. The lope of the cam in the 396 at idle would make the 8-tracks skip or lose track adjustment if the fenderwells were unplugged.
When my last 4-track machine bit the dust, cassettes were already out. |
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Ah, the good old days. Never a problem with sourcing confetti in those days, huh..... I ran across a box of old computer stuff the other day. An IBM Computer. Then another one, it's replacement, an IBM AT. Think both were 286 chips. One each. Hard drive maybe 256K? My first 'laptop' was in there too. 64K hard drive. Wonder if there's a market for these relics? |
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Funny this comes up today.
I was looking at the big stack of dusty, unused 3.5"s on my desk. Right next to them is a postage stamp sized 8GB SD card... Then there's those new tiny ones. What are they called? KT |
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Micro SD? http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1253225646.jpg |
magnetic drum storage -- I heard it was the coming thing...
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OMG - I hated it when you had a stack of punch cards and one of them got out of order!
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Anyone want my Bernoulli box?
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I'm pretty sure I had a computer with two Amstrad 3" 'floppy' drives in it at one point- they were these hard disks, about the thickness of an audio casette, made of hard plastic. I remember them being bigger than 3" but the Amstrad is the only drive I can find on the net that resembles these 'thick' floppy disks. We shoehorned windows 3.0 on one I think, it must have been mildly big. It took 20 minutes to boot.
http://images.cdn.fotopedia.com/flic...0592-image.jpg Although the more I think about it the more I think they were 5 1/2" wide or bigger. And about .25" thick. Anyone seen one of those before? |
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It WAS called something else then, but it was the same thing. Holding a card up to the ceiling lights and being able to 'read' it.... I was much younger then. I wore earplugs then, but went 37 years in airplanes without them. You knew your 'run' was done from across the street when the card machine stopped. |
I actually have a brand new dell sitting on my desk at work with a floppy drive. Thought it was hilarious.
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Anybody remember disc-packs - a round plastic box about the size of a stack of big dinner plates, held about 300mb (on ten magnetic discs! 30mb each disc) Took two hands to carry one safely, inserted into the top of a reader the size of a dishwasher.
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I wasn't going to embarass myself with mentioning those in here. Had one 'come apart' at speed late one night.
When parts stopped flying, I had made it under a desk just as the now denuded spindle reached terminal velocity and the electric motor frapped in a shower of sparks and flame. I figured out real quick why they paid college students no money to come in and do night audits. |
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I still have a 3.5" drive around - just in case. My laptop is pretty vintage and has one also that I can hot-swap in. I think I used it once, maybe 2 or 3 years ago to read some disk I'd found.
I find it amusing that all "new" PCs still have compatibility for all this legacy stuff that nobody in their right mind would ever use. Heck, my current PC doesn't even have a serial port (which kinda' actually bugs me because I have an old Summagraphics CAD tablet I'd like to be able to use if I ever needed...) |
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What about the cutting edge laser disks from the late '80s. You know the ones that were about as big as the old vinyl records.
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We were recently trying to figure out how to hook up an old Atari unit to show our son how different it is from WII or PS3
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Floppy disks? Yep, gotta few of them, unfortunatly they are part of my spine
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My company had tape backups that someone different took home everynight. As if it was top secret info. Silly now...
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I got rid of all of my floppies a few years ago. When I realized I had a few dozen flash drives laying around the house, I realized it was time to put the technology in the past.
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dp
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Counter-intuitive if you think about it - 3.5" stiffies, 5.25" floppies....odd. |
There is a brand new never used Jaz drive sitting on a shelf a few feet from my desk.
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