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Death to the 3.5" Floppy?

BawbBitchen writes "PC World in NZ is running this story about PC makers struggling to try to kill the floppy as a standard PC part. Gateway has started to take $10 off the price of a PC if you order the PC without the floppy. Hum, well my Mac does not have a floppy and I do not miss it & my Linux Server has one that I have never used. Does anyone out there still use their floppy?"

23 of 1,126 comments (clear)

  1. Remember slashdot when the iMac first came out? by lordpixel · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I do.

    The noise!
    The fury!
    The whining!

    It'll never sell, they said. What will people do without their floppy drive!
    Hell, I hardly even use the Zip drive on my G4 for anything anymore.

    --

    Lord Pixel - The cat who walks through walls
    A little bigger on the inside than out

  2. Re:BOOT DISK by Hollinger · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Why not use a boot CD? Most good cd-burning apps can make a CD bootable.

  3. Along with it... by chill · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'd like to see the serial port, parallel port, PS/2 mouse & keyboard port all go away.

    Firewire and USB can replace that and more. IDE and SCSI could also go away and be replaced by a Firewire or USB 2.0 bus.

    Worst comes to worst, use and adaptor for the USB port to make that must-have serial/parallel device work.

    For an interim, an IDE superfloppy, like the LS-120 is a nice way to wean off.

    --
    Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    1. Re:Along with it... by blamanj · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'd like to see the serial port, parallel port, PS/2 mouse & keyboard port all go away. Firewire and USB can replace that and more.

      It's called a Mac. Mouse/KB/Printer are USB. Even the speakers and microphone are USB. Other ports or Firewire and Ether.

  4. Compact Flash by Yohahn · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I would be VERY happy if they would replace the floppy with a compact flash receptical.

    Same idea as floppy... Probably same lifespan...
    Easy.. small.. not as fragile (in my experience)

    Yes.. compact flash should be the replacement.

    (and how about booting off of USB 2.0 hard drives and cdroms) :)

  5. Re:Sure do . . . by tchuladdiass · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Uh, they do NOT hold "1.44 MB". They hold 1,474,560 bytes, which in decimal is 1.47 MB, or if you are using base-2 (2^20) megabytes, that's 1.406 MB. Either number does not look like 1.44 MB.

    The reason that everybody calls them 1.44 is because they hold 1440 (base-2) kbytes, then people shorten this by performing a base-10 division to get 1.44. This mixing of a base-2 (1024) division followed by base-10 is just... weird.

  6. Anyone use PGP or GPG? by Bonker · · Score: 3, Insightful

    As has been said before, real security comes from when your access to something comes from two of the three:

    1. Something you know
    2. Something you have
    3. Something you are

    For example, passwords can be brute forced relatively easy, but if your password has to be accompanied by a retina scan, then your password protected data is significantly more secure.

    By the same token, if you have a password, but your PGP key is on your HDD, then your data is only as secure as your password to someone who has your PC. If, however, you keep your PGP on an external disk of some kind, then you go quite a bit further towards making your data secure to someone who has stolen or confiscated your PC. A floppy is pretty good for this purpose for the following reasons:

    It's fairly portable. You can reasonably carry a floppy disk in your wallet and pull it out when you need it without fear of destroying it.

    It's small enough and durable enough to manipulate. You can hide a floppy in a safe deposit box or ship it overseas if need be.

    Despite it's relative durability, it's also easily destroyed. CD's need to be dissolved in acid to be truly unrecoverable and Zip disks are relatively difficult to break into. Floppies, on the other hand, can be broken into and once you've eaten the plastic disk, you're data is forever encrypted.

    --
    The next Slashdot story will be ready soon, but subscribers can beat the rush and slashdot the links early!
  7. Userful at certain workplaces by Racine · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Perhaps some other career programmers here can relate to this.

    I use floppies when I want to bring some of my source code home with me from work, and I don't want to answer the questions posed by the sysadmins about why I'm trying to send certain things through the firewall. My company claims ownership of anything I write, but I'd like to keep portions of it for future reference should I ever change jobs.

    They are very strict about such things were I work, so I find it easier to bring things that I've written like useful functions and such home on floppies.

    That is more or less the only use I have left for them, but I'm glad they're available for it.

    --
    Tcl my Pico! There are 10 kinds of people in the world: Those who understand binary, and those who don't.
  8. School by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    In school these things are invaluable. You can work on papers and assignments in the computer lab and then go somewhere else and work. As it is, some of the computers don't have network accounts so transfering with a network is not possible.

  9. They're required for Windows boxes... by terrywin · · Score: 2, Insightful

    From my experience, you *must* have a floppy
    capable of booting DOS when a Windoze box
    takes a dump and doesn't revive itself.

    I always carry a modified Win* emergency
    boot disk in the briefcase.

    Unfortunately, I don't currently have one
    for my Mandrake or FreeBSD boxes. But then
    again they haven't trashed themselves enough
    to require a floppy to restart :)

    Terry

  10. CD-RW too hard to use by foo+fighter · · Score: 5, Insightful

    CD-RW won't replace the floppy until it is unecessary to use a 3rd party utility to write and delete from it.

    Maybe it's changed in Windows XP or MacOS X. But for Windows 2000 and Redhat Linux 7.2 I have to install and run a separate program and laboriously pick out which files I want to burn and finally say "go".

    I don't care if it's the OS writer's fault, the BIOS writer's fault, or whose fault it is. It's ludicrous that I can't simply type "copy foo.txt d:" the way I can type "copy foo.txt a:"! CD-RW drives have been out for years, get your shit together people.

    I've been trying to convert my company over to strictly CD-RW since we've had several disastors where the only copy of important data was on a floppy. (I know, I know, but users are users.) It's been completely unsuccesful because the burning programs aren't integrated with the OS the way floppy drivers are. Don't get me started on the burning program's horrible interfaces if you have anything else you want to do today.

    Until I can pop in my cd-rw, click-and-drag my files onto it, and pop it out to be used anywhere a cd can be -- without having to go through a 3rd program -- I and everyone else will still have a use for floppies.

    --
    obviously no deficiencies vs. no obvious deficiencies
  11. boot devices by sPaKr · · Score: 2, Insightful

    As long as floppys are used for boot devices we cant get rid of them. Bootable CD's are great.. but many bios dont have them. And when you have an old machine that needs to boot off of floppy, where are
    you going to make said bootable floppy. Yes I have been stuck up sh*t creek whithout a paddle.. a room full of computers.. and only one with a floppy that can only boot from a floppy. Yanking a HD just becouse you cant format a floppy to be bootable suckx my nutz.

  12. 3.5" Floppy Drives are a necessity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    As an IT Professional (someone that has to do creative problem solving on computer systems) I feel that the floppy drive is an absolute must have for fixing major problems on desktop systems. From my linux floppy that lets me hack into and modify NTFS hive files to reset admin passwords to the lowly Win 95 bootdisk with cd support I still use them all on at least a weekly basis. Yes I know much of this can be done with bootable CD's but if I need to customize the bootable CD I have to do it at a functioning system that contains a CD burner and I still need to supply the boot files. If I have a bootable floppy, I can boot off of the floppy, modify the necessary boot files directly at the broken machine and away we go. Long live the floppy!

  13. Windows 2000/NT/XP (possibly Linux) Install/Repair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I used them last night, in fact. I had fudged up Windows 2000 (my default opsys, and be quiet, I need Photoshop) and had to attempt to repair it by loading a kernel using the installation CD.

    To install Windows 2000/NT/XP on a machine that utilizes a RAID or SCSI card that is not on the default list (there a a few, but not enough) you must have a floppy drive. Unfortunately you cannot specify the drive to search from to "Add Additional Devices" drivers, you MUST use the floppy drive. You also need one diskette per driver, or rewrite the .inf file to have multiple driver choices on one diskette.

    This was a minor issue, since I have the two disks in the case with Win2000. But, if I recall correctly, I needed floppy disks to do the same thing installing Redhat Linux 7.3. Unfortunately my RAID card isn't on the list, and I am having troubles hacking a driver to work so I'm not sure what happens after the prompt. (I just reset the comp) =]

  14. powerpoint? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I don't know what kind of presentations he's giving, but the author of the original article thinks floppies are useless for Powerpoint? That is ALL I use floppies for these days. My 20-minute technical chemistry talks are only 300kb, max.

  15. Old samplers and synths by Maxon · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Those of us who use music equipment from the 80's need 3.5" floppys to transfer data to the and from the equipment. I have an Akai S-950 sampler that I backup the disks to my hard drive. I also transfer samples I got off the Internet or process on my computer to the S-950 with the floppy.

    Granted, if my computer didn't have a floppy drive I could add one. But if it didn't have a floppy controller I'd be screwed. The software to transfer data to and from the Akai formatted disks ONLY works in DOS, so that rules out using USB drives.

    ---
    Geoffrey
    Project AKO - http://ako.sf.net

  16. Re:You misrepresent the issue & Apple reversed by lordpixel · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Nah, it was too soon when Steve did it at NeXT with the NeXT cube.

    As for misreprenting the issue. This is 1998 we're talking about. CD-R maybe, CD-RW? Not on many of the PCs I saw. Hell, even today, what % is CD-RW?

    That said, Apple were late to the party shipping CDRW in a machine, something Steve said on stage. You can pull him on all sorts of bullshit, but that's not one of them.

    Arguably they were busy being early(ish) to the party with DVD as standard. Choice would have been nice though...

    --

    Lord Pixel - The cat who walks through walls
    A little bigger on the inside than out

  17. Students use floppies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Students often use floppies for easy transport (your average student doesn't understand FTP; hey, your average student can't even find his/her bunghole with both hands).

    In programming classes, for example, profs typically require a hard-copy and a soft-copy of code, and e-mailing the soft-copy is not always convenient for the teaching assistants/markers. Especially when some dumbass students include the source in the body of the e-mail instead of as an attachment.

  18. Why would anyone want... by sunset · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ... a universally accepted, cross-platform, dirt-cheap, pocket-sized, rewritable storage medium? Beats me.

  19. Re:3.5" Floppy by thefalconer · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Until a solid replacement comes around to take the place of the floppy disk as a general utility disk, it will never die. It might find itself a nominal part, but it will never die. Super disks are ok, but they still require too much to get them running. A floppy is nice because it's supported in the bios and does not need to have any special programs or drivers loaded to make it work. Until another media can match or exceed that ease of use and simplicity of instalation, the floppy will never go away. I nominate flash data sticks. They're easy to use, they hold large amounts of data for their small size, and although they're not within the price range of a floppy, they still can easily be made to operate as simply as a floppy and it would be very simple to implement bios support for them to make them as plug and play simple as a floppy.

  20. Nice for small, ultra-secret data like gpg keys by ry4an · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I keep my gpg private key on a floppy. My ~/.gnupg/secring.gpg file is a symlink to /mnt/floppy/secring.gpg. When I need to sign or decrypt something I push the floppy in, mount it, use the key, unmount, and eject.

    My box has been hacked a few times, but I like knowing for certain that the key wasn't taken.

  21. students by lo_fye · · Score: 2, Insightful

    i teach at a community college and i must say that students by and large only know how to use a floppy. burning cds is too compliated for some. FTP is beyond the capabilities of most. for this market I believe USB keychain drives could take over thanks to their ease of use... but anything more technical than that will not.

    --
    geeks are cats who dig a certain kind of cool
  22. Re:650 MB zipdisk perfect size to bootleg a CD. by Lord+Custos · · Score: 2, Insightful

    650 MB on a new Zipdisk, 650 MB on audio CD. Perfect size to sneakernet a bootleg
    Coincidence...or Conspiracy.
    Just wait for Hillary Rosen to notice this an try to prevent Iomega from selling them.