The End of a Floppy Era
An anonymous reader writes This article is an editorial on the end of the floppy and the rise of more portable, more efficient data storage." Floppy nothing. In my day we etched our data into pottery. Talk about your long term enterprise data storage. Some of those buggers made it thousands of years!
I still outfit every computer i build with a floppy. Only 10 bucks, and you never know when it'll come in handy.
So what's the new format for booting into DOS to flash my video card BIOS?
To me, there's still nothing quite like a cheap, simple, effective floppy to bootstrap with (e.g. etherboot) in a large computing environment.
They are just handy to do booting related stuff. What if the CDROM is broken? Floppies just work! And USB boot? I havent tried that and I doubt their effectiveness over floppies
This is my sig. There are thousands more, but this one is mine.
This article was just another worthless piece of bad journalism in the genre of "The end of X". This guy is ranting like people need to stop using floppies, but thats pretty much already happened. A lot of people I know don't even have floppy drives. Cheap optical media and USB drives have all but replaced it.
/sarcasm
Even at my mom's office, where they are very backwards about technology, they use zip drives over floppy drives.
I'm anxiously looking forward to reading the authors article on the "The End of the A-Track Era"
Advantages of floppies over USB:
* They can be removed without an unmount procedure.
* They are essentially free, whereas I need to get my USB drives returned.
* They don't autorun stuff when inserted.
* Works with Windows 98 (25% of the desktop market)
* They are bootable (handy when debugging a computer)
* Works with DOS (handy when debugging a computer)
For $10, I'll keep my floppy drive, thank you.
What have we got in terms of removable media though?
CD? certainly cheap, and at a guess 50% of computers now have them, but they are BIGGER than what they're replacing. Probably not as durable for day-to-day usage, either. FAIL
DVD? Well a much better replacement option than CD, were it not for the fact that probably only 10% of comnputers have them. Less durable that CD, with compatability issues still lingering on older equipment. FAIL
ZIP? Dead. Dead
USB memory sticks? Probably usable by 95%+ at least. Most are compatible alternative (well the ones using standard mass storage drivers anyway), but there are price issues. The cheapest ones are an order of magnitude or two more expensive than floppys/CDs/DVDs. Higher capacity ones (650MB-4.7GB) are A LOT more expensive than the alternative replacements, CDs and DVDs.
Portable HD? Great capacity, compatability, capacity/price ratio, but an even higher minimum price than the thumbdrives.
All other options just have no real benefits over the alternatives listed above and/or have a pathetic tiny market share.
Why did the industry fail so horribly in coming up with a cheap and easy floppy replacement? Perhaps there's just far less need for it now that so many PCs are connected via the internet or local LAN.
Is it "Floppy is dead" or "removable mass media is dead"?
All comments about floppy disks aside, that has to be the worst-written article I have ever read ever. Did no one else notice the appalling style?
The Southern Baptist Convention has creationism. On Slashdot, we have porn.
People are willing to pay good money for a retro cassette drive for their computers right now to gain points with the geek crowd.
Wait a minute; I'm going to sell my "crap box" full of floppy drives on eBay for the retro crowd. I'll soon be a thousandaire. Or at least a hundredaire.
hi mom!
I can certainly hear the death knell ringing in the distance, but as with all legacy equipment, the floppy will never quite die. In repairing computers for the past ten or so years, I have been required to use a floppy with, paradoxically, increasing frequency. Boot cds are wonderful, but many times older equipment (the stuff that fails that I'm being asked to troubleshoot) just cannot handle them; some require a floppy to due to the nonexistent bios booting option; others are of great use simply because old software, well written, will never pass away. Surely those of you who do data recovery and forensics have loads of such tools at your disposal?
Floppies have served us well, and at least some of us will be using them for some time to come.
Floppies are still usefull for loading computers either by copying the CD source to the HD first or for Imaging a HD. What About HD Diagnostics? Do you really want to have to create a bootable CD everytime you want to do this? I think floppies are still easier to use for alot tech and loading issues, just because you can't use them as a long term data storage anymore, doesn't mean they are dead, there usage has just change from a mainly user role to more of an admin/tech role.
Ad eundum quo nemo ante iit!
1) email yourself
2) copy it onto a flash drive
3) load it into a share that you can then access at home.
"Slashdot, where telling the truth is overrated but lying is insightful."
The floppy is the only easily writable medium today that you can reliably boot a PC from. USB storage is still not there yet. CD/DVD/etc is not writable in any HDD/floppy-like sense. That is the reason why countless utilities (BIOS iupdata, HDD diagnose, ramtest, disk-imagers, desaster recovery, ....) are available on floppies.
Until something as compatible and universal as the floppy is around, removing it is just plain stupid. I am quite anoyed at the people that have predicted the death of the floppy again and again for several years now.
Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
So you can't have flash sticks in the building, but you are allowed to take a stack of floppies around?
You're right, that _is_ insane network security.
"I Know You Are But What Am I?"
Dead? As in obsolete? Obsolete is just a word. Get over it. Floppies will not die until the last person who ever puts on in a PC decides it's not worth it anymore. There is no debate and frankly if you're losing sleep over this issue maybe it is you that is obsolete.
If a Commodore 64 is what it takes to get you where you're going than a Commodore 64 is still a viable machine, if your needs are fulfilled by a floppy than a floppy is still viable storage.
Dedicated Cthulhu Cultist since 4523 BC.
A 128MB USB stick costs about $25 which is about the same cost as a floppy disk drive, plus 100 floppies and a damn sight more convenient.
And a damn sight less bootable when troubleshooting older machines.