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Dell Dropping The Floppy

adambwells writes "Dell wants to stop including floppy drives as standard hardware on its Dimension line of desktops, and will start this practice later this quarter, as reported in this Yahoo article. Says Dell's product marketing: We would like to see customers migrate away from floppies as quickly as possible, because there are better alternative technologies out there ... it's an antique technology. At some point, you've got to draw the line. You wouldn't think of using a processor from 15 years ago." They plan to educate their customers about recordable CDs and USB pen drives as replacements."

32 of 1,198 comments (clear)

  1. Blasphemy! by Captain+Tenille · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I mean, floppies aren't useful for much, but when you need one, you really need one.

    Next thing you know, they're going to take away our serial ports and PS/2 ports. Bastards.

    --

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    /* You are not expected to understand
    1. Re:Blasphemy! by CaptainBaz · · Score: 5, Interesting

      This has already happened. The other day, a vendor tried to sell me a motherboard with no FDD controller, no serial/parallel ports, and no PS/2 ports. Needless to say, I went elsewhere.

      Yes, these features are old technology. But they're also mature technology - they work fine, now leave them alone!

    2. Re:Blasphemy! by EpsCylonB · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The floppy drive is quite possibly the one component inside a computer that most users trust the most.

      I don't know about that, I have found that floppy disks these days tend to be a lot less reliable than they used to be, prolly cause they have got so cheap. Optical media is a better because once its burned you don't have to worry so much about the quality of the disk and the data degrading.

      There is nothing you can do with a floppy disk that you can't theoretically do with a cd, it's just a case of getting mobo manafacturers to to add the support.

  2. Well that takes me back by TerryAtWork · · Score: 5, Funny

    I remember when they ADDED the new-fangled 3 1/4 inch floppy drive to machines.

    Back before there was dirt, and a computer weighed 6,000 tons!

    And we programmed with ones and with zeros - and sometimes we ran out of ones!

    --
    It's Christmas everyday with BitTorrent.
  3. OK with me by The+Bungi · · Score: 5, Insightful
    As long as they *provide* the pen drive or similar device, *and* place an easily accessible USB or FireWire port on the front of the chassis. If they're going to remove the floppy and force me to reach around the damn box then it probably won't work.

    And I really don't think a CDR/CDRW is yet the answer to storage, unless UDF is standardized enough (as in supported at the OS level).

  4. -1; Redundant by M.C.+Hampster · · Score: 4, Funny

    The "back in the day" jokes are older than an 8088.

    --
    Forget the whales - save the babies.
  5. Re:Woo - Hoo by alaric187 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Hopefully they get rid of all of the "extra" stupid buttons on the mouse too...

  6. Re:About Time. by Ninja+Master+Gara · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I've had my drives in every system, but they all go bad from dust exposure in a few months from lack of use. Not that I can find a 3 1/2" disk that works without buying a new box, anyway.

    --

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    When I grow up, I want to be a kid again.
  7. dropping? by Lxy · · Score: 4, Funny

    usually dropping floppies isn't something that's desired. I remember the days before CDs, carrying all 27 floppies needed to install WIndows 95, you drop the stack, and, well, you'll never install off that set again.

    Oh, you mean... I see.

    --

    There is no reasonable defense against an idiot with an agenda
    :wq
  8. Re:Woo - Hoo by BWJones · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Dell is finally catching up to changes Apple made 5 years ago!

    Most of the personal computer industry is catching up to the changes Apple made 5 years ago, and they have been since the Apple ][.

    --
    Visit Jonesblog and say hello.
  9. Floppy uses by Wattsman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Can I boot from a USB drive? And what about all of those install disks I still get? Hard Drive manufacturers still have their disk setup programs based on a floppy disk install.
    Also, I can't use USB drives at the machines at work (due to security risks of removing sensitive data). Sure, you can remove data on a floppy, but try doing that with a 50+ MB compressed file.

  10. "You wouldn't think of using a processor..." by NineNine · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "You wouldn't think of using a processor from 15 years ago."

    And why not? If it does the job, why should I care when the processor was made? Dell's trying hard to sell new products, and that's understandable, but it's ridiculous to think that everybody buys stuff just because it's "new". Heck, I'm still using hardware from the early 90's (10 years old), and it works fine. I'm not gonna blow money on something just because it's "new".

    And as far as alternative technologies, they're still not good enough. I've never heard of a "USB Pen", and I'm sure as hell not going to waste money on some cutting edge technology that nobody's using yet. CD-R's are either very slow, one time burns, or very slow, very incompatible CD-RW's. Neither is good if I need to sneakernet a bit of data.

    But then again, I'm not a Dell customer. I use a computer until it literally falls apart, and then I buy a closeout or used computer at great prices when I need a "new" one. No point in spending top dollar for a computer these days unless you're into games, or you have some big server needs.

    1. Re:"You wouldn't think of using a processor..." by Ponty · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You're precisely the person Michael Dell couldn't give a damn about. You're never going to buy his computer, so he doesn't need to worry about what you think.

      It's rough, but it's the case. Where would the world be in companies had to take into account the needs of the people who love to criticise but never have any plans on purchasing their products?

  11. Re:About Time. by jo.cool · · Score: 5, Funny

    Actually I made it my business to get a 5 1/4" installed in my Athlon, just in case, you know, I want to run WordStar.

  12. Re:About Time. by cesman · · Score: 5, Interesting

    You're not kidding... I seems the quality of drives and media has gone down. I remember being in high school ('86-'90), I'd carry about floppies with me all year around (blistering heat of summer and bone chilling cold of winter in Chicago). I'd never have a problem with them, I'd hope from one computer to another with the media. Try that now days... The floppy will work in one drive but not the next... WTF?!

    --
    When the source is open, the possibilities are endless.
  13. Support Hates Floppies by 90XDoubleSide · · Score: 4, Informative

    One of the main reasons for doing this is support: floppy drives result in people having broken machines and lost data. Back in 1996-7 when I helped support a high school's computers, 75% of the hardware problems on the Dells and 100% of the hardware problems on the Macs were with floppy drives, and most of the other problems we had to deal with were people who had lost their paper by trying to rewrite a floppy disc too many times (people still think a floppy disc can last for a whole semester!). The next year when Apple dropped the floppy disc, we never had a hardware problem with the new Macs; it's easy to see why Dell wants to do the same: you can instantly cut support costs drastically and increase customer satisfaction.

    --
    "Reality is just a convenient measure of complexity" -Alvy Ray Smith
  14. low level utilities? by afidel · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Will they allow things like BIOS flash updates to run from El Torito cdroms? I mean last time I checked most low level utilities will check to make sure they aren't running out of a virtual floppy because when the BIOS is being overwritten etc the virtualization tech might break and leave the system in an unrecoverable state.

    --
    There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
  15. This damn well better be supported in the BIOS by ct · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Now I'll be honest that I haven't looked into whether or not USB solid state storage is standard across the board, but if they're doing away with floppies then I had better be able to boot from my USB pen/key/dongle storage device if & when needed by simply changing the boot order.

    If I want/need to run some low level hardware diagnostics (IBM's Drive Fitness Test tool anyone?) or flash to a new BIOS revision or update the firmware on a SCSI controller - a floppy is basically the only way to go - especially with downloadable updates that REQUIRE you to create a floppy from them.

    If the only way I can update these parts is by disassembling the now crippled machines & putting their components into a machine that does have a floppy to update them, then replace (x 250 machines...) - Dell can count on number of enterprise customers nixing them from the list of potential hardware vendors. Don't limit my options - period.

    But that's just my opinion.

    //ct

  16. Re:My Reasons for Wanting Those Ports by Blkdeath · · Score: 5, Informative
    PS/2: Tried, true, and works with my old IBM clicky-clacky keyboard. I love that keyboard, and it's waaay more durable than any newer keyboard. I've spilled beer on it and it continues clacking away.

    PS/2 <-> USB converter.

    Parallel Port: I'd like to keep using my older printers and my old parallel Zip Drive. It's slow, but handy sometimes.

    Get a print server for your old printers (two-ports can be had for under $100, and networking them is a snap), and buy a CD-RW drive. ZIP drives are slow, kludgy, low-capacity, and have a tendency to click your media (and drive) to death at a seemingly random time (usually disk 13 of 26 is the victim). Moreover, probably 95% or more of home and office computers have CD-ROM drives of some form or another, which makes CD-R/RW discs far more portable than the very, very slim market share of ZIP drives. CD-RW drives can be had brand-new for about $75CDN and can burn 900MB worth of data to a disc in approximately 1 minute 30 seconds. 900MB discs can be had for about $0.50CDN, 800MB CD-RW discs can be had for about $3CDN or less. How much does a 100 or 250MB ZIP disk cost, again?

    Serial Ports: How else are you supposed to hook up a dumb terminal to your computer. USB?

    Will the 0.02% of the population using dumb-terminals on their home PCs please stand up?

    Seriously, there's no reason to drop these devices. Why not include them with the newer stuff.

    Becauses the busses are slow, kludgy, and cost sillicon and valuable board real-estate that could be used for UATA133 or additional USB 2.0 (450+ MB/Sec) or IEEE1394 / FireWire (400+ MB/Sec) connectors, or to make motherboards smaller and/or less expensive.

    Besides, USB is not to be trusted.

    I'll assume you've got some figures to support this otherwise baseless claim?

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    Shameless plug. Like you weren't expecting it.

  17. Re:About Time. by Zathrus · · Score: 4, Informative

    The big problem I have with floppies (really the only since I hardly ever use them) is the way they essentially tie up a computer. They bring your system to a grinding halt while they are accessing.

    That's an artifact of your OS.

    Back in the early 90's OS/2 had no problems multitasking floopy I/O - I recall formating a few hundred floppies while doing other stuff, with absolutely no degredation in performance of other tasks.

    I've only formatted a floppy once under XP, so I don't recall how it handled it. Win9x did not handle it well though, which is an artifact of still being built off of DOS.

    I don't believe Linux or other Unix-based systems have issues multitasking the floppy.

  18. Re:I want my floppy by Overt+Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    There's nothing stopping you from adding a floppy to a Dell system that comes without one, is there? What's wrong with Dell removing a device from their standard configuration if most people (in Dell's opinion) don't want or need it? If you are in the minority of people who still need floppies (and BTW, I'm in that minority), just install your own.

  19. Re:Device drivers and rescue disks by Zathrus · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Most device drivers can still fit onto one floppy disk, and thus the comparitive cost of CD vs floppy media would make it stupid to burn 1M of data onto a 650M CD

    Agreed. It's much cheaper to press the CD.

    You realize, don't you, that you can't press a floppy, right? You have to actually encode the data into it, which means actually inserting the floppy into a drive, writing to it, and removing it. Even done by machine this takes more time than pressing a CD. CD pressing costs are around $.20 in volume, and it doesn't matter if you have 1 byte or 700 MB on the disk - it's the same amount of time (although obviously defect rates can go up with more data).

    Besides, if I'm supplying a driver, then nowadays I'll probably do things like supply the documentation electronically as well. And a viewer for the doc unless it's HTML or text.

    Rescue disks can be put on CD nearly as easily as on floppy - and you can put more stuff on the disk for disaster recovery.

    And yes, it's only $10 for the floppy hardware. But cut that out, along with the labor in attaching it and testing it, and you may save $15-30 total. When you're selling a $500 PC, upping your profit by 3-6% isn't a bad proposition.

  20. Re:My Reasons for Wanting Those Ports by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 4, Funny

    Will the 0.02% of the population using dumb-terminals on their home PCs please stand up?

    Two hundredths of a percent of the population is 60,000 people in the USA alone. I think you're overestimating by a few orders of magnitude. If you can find me six people in the USA who are using dumb terminals on their home PC's, I'll give you a cookie.

    --

    I write in my journal
  21. Re:About Time. by Gehenna_Gehenna · · Score: 5, Funny

    That's nothing. Why, when I was a young lad my parents used to make me wear floppy disks as clothing!

    My old man would wake me up at 2:00 in the morning and make me format floppy disks untill 5:00 the following morning and I liked it! I loved it! I used to store the entire ecyclopedia britannica on only 245,037,072 disks and it suited me just fine!

    Tell that to them kids today and they won't believe ya.

    --

  22. Re:Woo - Hoo by pla · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Most of the personal computer industry is catching up to the changes Apple made 5 years ago, and they have been since the Apple ][.

    Five(ish) years ago, Apple decided to allow 3rd party manufacturers of Mac hardware to bring down costs (much like the PC industry had done 15 years earlier). It almost killed them, and they stopped allowing this practice (well, very tightly clamped down on it) only a few months later.

    Funny how one person's 5-years-too-soon may equal another person's 15-years-too-late, and what makes one can break the other.

  23. HP to discontinue printers by phr2 · · Score: 4, Funny
    In other news, HP will follow Dell's lead--it wants to stop including printers in its product line, and will start this practice later this quarter, as reported in this Yahoo article. Says HP's product marketing: We would like to see customers migrate away from paper as quickly as possible, because there are better alternative technologies out there ... it's an antique technology. At some point, you've got to draw the line. You wouldn't think of using a table or chair from 15 years ago." They plan to educate their customers about DRM-equipped e-books with floating licenses as replacements.

    There seems to be some industry rule, that anything that works must be improved til it doesn't work any more!

  24. The cost of floppies in a 40 user network. by t0qer · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Think about it..

    Floppies retail cost anywhere from 15-20 bucks. So you're looking at about an extra $800 bucks in parts for all your PC's.

    For $800 these days you can add a nice bit of hard disk space to your 40 clients. Prices have dropped around a dollar a gigabyte. You can also buy a decent backup system for around that price too to back them all up. Hell you can even get a pretty decent networked laserjet for that price.

    Personally, I would much rather have more hard disk space or backup for the network than a floppy. I agree with Dell %100 on this issue.

  25. Re:My Reasons for Wanting Those Ports by AKnightCowboy · · Score: 5, Funny
    CD-RW drives can be had brand-new for about $75CDN and can burn 900MB worth of data to a disc in approximately 1 minute 30 seconds. 900MB discs can be had for about $0.50CDN, 800MB CD-RW discs can be had for about $3CDN or less.


    Is that 900MB Canadian or 900MB U.S.? If it's Canadian then that comes out to about 700MB U.S. right? I wasn't aware they sold 900MB Canadian discs.. must be a perk of paying that music industry tax on recordable media. :-)

  26. What will become of the BSA? by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 4, Funny


    If this goes down, the Business Software Alliance will have to change their catch-phrase!

    I have to admit, "Don't Copy That USB Keychain Flash Media Device" doesn't have the same ring as "Don't Copy That Floppy"...

  27. Re:About Time. by Scratch-O-Matic · · Score: 4, Funny

    Luxury! When I was a kid kid we used to DREAM of floppies! We had to store the encyclopaedia same as you, only we did it on perforated computer paper. That's right, paper! But it wasn't in plain text, as you might expect. No sir, it was done in huge ASCII poster print, one letter per page. Now and then the old man would wake from his drunken nap and holler for us to fetch him some obscure reference, and we younger ones had to run out back and haul in a wheel barrow full of paper. But that was only the index!

    --


    Evil is the money of root.
  28. Re:About Time. by wheany · · Score: 4, Funny

    You had fingers and a cupboard?

    We had to write on crushed glass, with our eyeballs! And we liked it!

    Pfft, fingers...

  29. We know what's going to happen... by Millennium · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Apple dropped the floppy five years ago. The whole industry predicted that either it would kill Apple, or they'd have floppy drives back in the very next generation of machines.

    Neither happened. Life went on, because the floppy really was archaic and outdated; alternatives really did exist.

    Now, granted, these were Macs, which have just about always had much better hardware/software integration than five years previous. As a Mac user myself, this argument of "but what about machines which don't boot off of USB or Firewire?" looks utterly absurd, because, well, why the hell aren't these machines capable of booting off of it? Or this bit about "How can the average user make bootable CD's?"; why the hell should making bootable CD's be so difficult that the average user can't do it?

    Maybe it's just that I come from a Mac background, where things Just Work. But honestly, it sounds like the only reasons to keep the floppy around on the PC would be dealing with fundamental flaws in the PC's architecture. Then again, it's rather ironic that Dell uses a "you wouldn't use a processor that was 15 years old" when they use an outdated architecture that's even older, so maybe there's something to that. A blind insistence on pack-ratting old technologies, maybe, at the expense of advancement?