Slashdot Mirror


The End of the 3.5-inch Floppy Continues

JoshuaInNippon writes "In a brief press release buried within Sony Japan's website, the company announced that it would be ending sales of the classic 3.5-inch diskette in the country in March 2011. Sony introduced the size to the world in 1981, and it saw its heyday in the 1990s. Sony has been one of the last major manufacturers to continue shipments of the disk type it helped develop, but had ended most worldwide sales in March of this year. The company's production of the 3.5-inch floppy ceased in 2009. Sony noted demand, or lack thereof, as the reason. The company's withdrawal is one of the final acts in the slow death of the floppy era."

472 comments

  1. Reminder by mseeger · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I needed the anouncement of the floppy disk demise as reminder that it is not already dead. Bought my last disk at least a decade ago....

    1. Re:Reminder by Sepultura · · Score: 5, Informative

      If you just look at the PC market you're right - floppies have been out of fashion for quite some time, and I don't think I've used one in at least a decade either, although I know some individuals in education who still have all of their crucial data (exams, assignments, custom s/w for their field, etc.) on 3.5"s.

      However, where this really could cause problems is in some embedded systems. For some reason a lot of manufacturers of CNC equipment, like VMCs or even embroidery machines, stuck with the ubiquitous floppy for far too long. I know at least as late as 05-06 Haas CNC was still using floppies.

      It looks to me like makers of floppy to usb adapters are going to be in for a boon.

    2. Re:Reminder by rjch · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Someone really ought to let Microsoft know about this... after all, despite three service packs, Windows XP and Server 2003 still requires a floppy drive in order to load drivers for non-standard hardware (including SATA drives not in emulation mode) that will need to be accessed as part of installation.

    3. Re:Reminder by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you have to reach back to Server 2003 for that to be a problem, then it sounds like Microsoft has known for 7 years.

      What, are you using Windows XP on new hardware?

    4. Re:Reminder by jawtheshark · · Score: 2, Informative

      I have installed XP on numerous SATA-only machines using a WinXP Pro Volume License CD with only SP2 (and later SP3) without any problem. No, they didn't have emulation at all.

      Yes, a SP1 or even SP0 will need the manufacturer disks, but not anything beyond.

      --
      Ahhh...the great dumpster continuum. Many a free computer will be found there. -- sowth (748135)
    5. Re:Reminder by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      You can use nLite to bundle the drivers right on to the installation CD. And seeing as how Microsoft is well on it's way to phasing out XP, I doubt they'll be interested in modifying the install process.

    6. Re:Reminder by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thats how it is at my company too. I'm the IT guy and I constantly have to get the engineers floppy drives so they can pull data from the manufacturing tools. This is in a Microchip
      design firm!

    7. Re:Reminder by Chupathingy · · Score: 1, Funny

      Bought my last disk at least a decade ago....

      With all the free AOL disks I got, I don't think I EVER bought a floppy disk...

    8. Re:Reminder by Bearhouse · · Score: 2, Interesting

      If your hardware & software supports USB and floppy via UBA emulation - not always the case for some of the implementations you mention

    9. Re:Reminder by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      However, where this really could cause problems is in some embedded systems. For some reason a lot of manufacturers of CNC equipment, like VMCs or even embroidery machines, stuck with the ubiquitous floppy for far too long. I know at least as late as 05-06 Haas CNC was still using floppies.

      That's OK, people will still be making 3.5" floppies for a long time. I suppose the easiest option for long-term support of such devices would be to emulate the floppy drive itself, and make a memory card reader that plugged into a floppy bus. You'd write the floppy data and it would pretend to be a floppy drive. Really fancy ones would need partition table support so they could select from one of several files; cheapies would just treat the address as an offset and spew whatever was in the flash.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    10. Re:Reminder by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Too true.

      I have a USB floppy drive, funnily enough, from Sony. Works brilliantly.
      I had to deal with floppies on and off for the past few years. And it is always better to have at least one route to access data from storage devices if you deal with loads of people.

      Next on the line for adapters will be IDE. There are quite a few products out there, from bays to a simple block you connect up, plug in and switch on.
      I have a couple of them sitting around. Had to use one a couple days ago to check sisters laptop drive since she "tripped" over it as you do with laptops... she still hasn't learned that you can't treat technology like shit.

    11. Re:Reminder by jshackney · · Score: 1

      However, where this really could cause problems is in some embedded systems. For some reason a lot of manufacturers of CNC equipment, like VMCs or even embroidery machines, stuck with the ubiquitous floppy for far too long. I know at least as late as 05-06 Haas CNC was still using floppies.

      This is very true.

      I know nothing of the airlines' transport aircraft, but many business aircraft are still using 1.44 floppies and some are using Zip 100. I'm flying a 2006 model aircraft that incorporates the floppy drive.

      I can't speak for industries other than aviation, but there is some inertia (regulatory or contractually) to continue to use these antiquated systems. It costs a great deal of money to do something that seems so simple to do within any other industry because we're so heavily regulated. Just changing a 1.44 floppy drive to say a Zip 100 drive could potentially create a mountain of paperwork, expensive manual updates for each affected aircraft (every s/n is unique), possibly engineering reports, etc. It sounds silly, but you can't "just do it" in aviation without getting your approval approved. And if you do it wrong, there's always the threat that you may have to start over entirely. For operators, it's typically not worth it to change directions like this. Preference is to let someone else with deeper pockets do it. Then you just buy the Supplemental Type Certificate (usually very expensive, but rarely more expensive than going through the process yourself).

    12. Re:Reminder by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I bought my last diskette seven years ago or so, but I still use them - a lot. See, I bought most of them for backup purposes. I have been migrating my backups to other media and now I never have to buy a diskette if I need one, since there's always a now empty one around. I use them to shift small files around (a lot of the computers I have to work with do have USB ports, but they have been disabled by the administrators (and rightly so) for security reasons) and of course as rescue disks. Did you know that you can boot Windows 3.1 with, thanks to Avira, NTFS support from a single diskette? You can fit in quite a number of useful tools, especially if you use DMF.

    13. Re:Reminder by schwanerhill · · Score: 1

      I needed the anouncement of the floppy disk demise as reminder that it is not already dead. Bought my last disk at least a decade ago....

      Hmmm, a decade ago, it had been four years since I'd had a machine capable of reading a floppy disk. :)

      (Bought an iMac as my primary machine in 1997, IIRC.)

    14. Re:Reminder by couchslug · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I stash good quality floppy drives when I part out systems, as well as motherboards (incl CPU and RAM) with ISA slots. My friends who have machine shops can use the spares.

      Protip:
      Floppy drives from old HP servers are excellent, and likely only used for drivers during OS reloads.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    15. Re:Reminder by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know SATA was introduced in 2003, back when Windows XP and Server 2003 were new.

    16. Re:Reminder by nurb432 · · Score: 1

      And to think i just tossed out 20 of them the other day.. Should have held on to them to sell later as supplies dry up.

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    17. Re:Reminder by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep. I recently worked for a large manufacturer who had 300+ production machines on the floor and all needed 3.5in floppies to backup and update software. None of these machines even had USB as they were quite old and built specifically for this application circa 1995. I suggested they start moving to USB at the very least but that idea was put on the back burner due to cost. I guess they will figure it out eventually.

    18. Re:Reminder by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Innovate or die. If you still make equipment that requires a floppy you are not trying hard enough. I worked in the CNC industry and can say our stuff supported direct network access so there is no reason why other companies can't make a solution for existing and new product to work without floppies.

      Also, the floppy is reusable so while you may not be able to buy new disks, at least you can erase and reuse old ones for some time.

      But its not like anybody could not see this comming. If solutions are not in place today to replace the floppy, or companies are still selling products that use a floppy drive, then they deserve the kick in the ass this is going to give them.

    19. Re:Reminder by Nimey · · Score: 1

      Also, the floppy is reusable so while you may not be able to buy new disks, at least you can erase and reuse old ones for some time

      Where are you getting these super-high-quality floppies from? The ones I can get generally develop bad sectors within a year or maybe six uses, whichever comes first.

      Probably nobody makes quality ones any longer, since there's no money in the things.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    20. Re:Reminder by grahamsaa · · Score: 0, Troll

      Protip: Using words or phrases like "protip" or "pro tip" makes you sound like a douche.

      --
      Facts have a liberal bias.
    21. Re:Reminder by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Someone really ought to let Microsoft know about this... after all, despite three service packs, Windows XP and Server 2003 still requires a floppy drive in order to load drivers for non-standard hardware (including SATA drives not in emulation mode) that will need to be accessed as part of installation.

      I still cringe for every eternal reboot needed to reinstall XP or do some MBR maintenance. MS should also be ashamed to have the slowest loading CD installer/rescue console ever with XP (fixed for Vista+). It lists DLLs loaded very slowly for a full 5 minutes, and still won't load mouse drivers. XP was post-Y2K and made pretty bold decisions like removing 4 and 8-bit color depths (16 and 256) as well as old supported resolutions under 640-by-480. What x86 desktop computer since Y2K has failed to include some form of pointer hardware? Yet they screwed us by not bringing their installer tech along with these other "necessary" fixes.

    22. Re:Reminder by Nimey · · Score: 2, Informative

      Not entirely true. You can integrate DriverPacks.net's drivers into an XP (and I'd assume Server '03) ISO image and burn it. I've done one of those with every driver those folks had available two years ago: storage, LAN, sound, video, chipset, wireless, even the AMD Cool & Quiet CPU driver. I further customized that with nLite so it wouldn't ask for a license key and had a few minor customizations.

      Works very well.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    23. Re:Reminder by Caetel · · Score: 1

      If only Microsoft had release two operating systems since then that supported loading drivers from devices other than floppies (Vista and 7 for the Desktop, Server 2008 and Server 2008 R2 for the server)

    24. Re:Reminder by Nimey · · Score: 1

      Wrong. SP2 still needs SATA drivers. Some of the OEM discs don't - Dell, for example, has integrated Intel SATA drivers with at least their SP3 discs.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    25. Re:Reminder by blackraven14250 · · Score: 1

      You'd have a floppy on the older machines on which you would do a new install of XP or Server 2003.

    26. Re:Reminder by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If only they would release a new version of their OS that would use a newer installer which supported other methods.

    27. Re:Reminder by LoRdTAW · · Score: 1

      As another poster noted, nlite can slipstream drivers, service packs, updates and even 3rd party software into an existing XP cd or ISO. Then it can create a bootable ISO you can burn. I updated my old crusty XP SP1 cd and it was was much more easy to preform an install. No rebooting a dozen times and waiting hours for updates and service packs to install.

    28. Re:Reminder by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it was was much more easy to preform an install

      WTF does this mean?

    29. Re:Reminder by Thing+1 · · Score: 1

      Emulating the hardware is interesting and would provide value. I see a wider use case though: emulate the floppy disk itself. It could have some sort of non-volatile memory (a tiny flash drive, or perhaps a large one that can be partitioned into multiple "floppy images"), and/or a cable coming out of the thin top edge, like the cassettes that allow you to connect another device like a CD player in your car (analogy). And there would be a motor sensor in the middle, so it would know how fast it's "spinning", and the read window would be updated to match the data that would appear if it were really an actual floppy.

      The one reason I thought of this is for the embedded floppy in my old electronic keyboard that's in storage; I forget the make and model, from a search it might have been the Yamaha PSR-420. I'm not sure how easy it would be to replace the drive in there; might be custom moldings etc that would be difficult to work around/adjust, so being able to "fool" it into using a completely electronic floppy might be the easier approach (from the user's perspective, that is).

      With it connected to a cable, it could even store the floppy image on the other side of that cable -- making it possible to "network" that old keyboard as well.

      --
      I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
    30. Re:Reminder by 1s44c · · Score: 1

      I have installed XP on numerous SATA-only machines using a WinXP Pro Volume License CD with only SP2 (and later SP3) without any problem.

      Strange. I had to install XP SP2 a while ago and was very annoyed that it needed a floppy for sata support.

    31. Re:Reminder by wwwillem · · Score: 1

      | I suppose the easiest option for long-term support of such devices would
      | be to emulate the floppy drive itself, and make a memory card reader that
      | plugged into a floppy bus.

      This exists already:

      http://news.directindustry.com/press/sigmatek/compact-flash-floppy-drive-cff-011-retrofitting-for-35-floppy-drives-13981-35685.html

      Don't know anything about this product, just googled for "floppy flash", but it seems someone thought already about this.

      --
      Browsers shouldn't have a back button!! It's all about going forward...
    32. Re:Reminder by Golden_Rider · · Score: 1

      Also, the floppy is reusable so while you may not be able to buy new disks, at least you can erase and reuse old ones for some time

      Where are you getting these super-high-quality floppies from? The ones I can get generally develop bad sectors within a year or maybe six uses, whichever comes first.

      Probably nobody makes quality ones any longer, since there's no money in the things.

      So true. The company I work at still orders 3.5" disks from some supplier, because those disks are still needed for some REALLY old machines. It is not unusual to get a fresh box of ten disks, and 4-5 of them fail with bad sectors when being written to the first time. They are just complete crap, but apparently it is hard to find another supplier.

    33. Re:Reminder by couchslug · · Score: 1

      Protip protip:

      Acquire a sense of humor regarding the term.

      http://encyclopediadramatica.com/PROTIP

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    34. Re:Reminder by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've wondered for years now why motherboard manufacturers haven't mapped a USB port to drive A via on board floppy emulation so that the rest of us can move on. If you really needed a floppy drive, you'd just plug in a USB floppy, otherwise thumb drives should have made this obsolete years ago.

      I never knew about the floppy to usb adapter though, thanks, I'll be ordering one of these so I can stop slip streaming drivers into my Win XP install disks.

    35. Re:Reminder by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Odds are your keyboard uses a bog-standard PC floppy, most everything does. You might need one with support for more jumpers than the typical PC floppy controller, however; I used to have a genesis and snes-to-floppy copier and it took a standard one but had an untwisted cable so you had to jumper for... what was it, device 0 where PC floppy drives often only have jumpers for 2 and 3? Or maybe vice versa, I forget. I remember PCs being weird and stupid.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    36. Re:Reminder by caseih · · Score: 1

      I don't know what "UBA emulation" is, but looking at the product on the website the GP pointed to shows a device that looks and acts like a floppy drive, even using the floppy drive controller, while accessing a usb flash drive. In fact this device is advertised specifically for the implementations the GP indicated. I do not believe "UBA emulation" even plays into this.

      I'm very glad the GP posted this link. I had no idea such a product existed. Even right now I can think of an older MIDI player piano that this could be used in.

    37. Re:Reminder by jawtheshark · · Score: 1

      Mine most definitely isn't an OEM disk and I didn't add anything except SP2 and later SP3. I keep hearing the claim, but I never experienced it myself.

      --
      Ahhh...the great dumpster continuum. Many a free computer will be found there. -- sowth (748135)
    38. Re:Reminder by jawtheshark · · Score: 1

      I guess it happens with non-standard SATA chipsets. I don't know, I really never had it happen to me from SP2 onwards and I've installed a lot of machines.

      --
      Ahhh...the great dumpster continuum. Many a free computer will be found there. -- sowth (748135)
    39. Re:Reminder by yuhong · · Score: 1

      MS completely rewrote the Windows installer in Vista, which is now based on Windows PE and WIM, and along the way they added support for loading drivers from non-floppies.

    40. Re:Reminder by yuhong · · Score: 1

      Actually, XP was not new by 2003. But Server 2003 was. And it took until 2004 before AHCI was created, too late for both.

    41. Re:Reminder by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      Someone really ought to let Microsoft know about this... after all, despite three service packs, Windows XP and Server 2003 still requires a floppy drive in order to load drivers for non-standard hardware (including SATA drives not in emulation mode) that will need to be accessed as part of installation.

      When's the last you tried this? I installed XP just fine in a SATA-only computer using the SP2 disk.

      More to the point, Microsoft does know about this, which is why Vista (which came out well over 3 years ago now) and 7 don't have the same problem.

    42. Re:Reminder by billcopc · · Score: 1

      SP2 may have a few newer drivers, but for any recent machine you still need that floppy. By recent, I mean 2005 and later. If you use RAID or AHCI, you definitely need that floppy.

      A workaround is to remaster the Windows CD with your additional drivers, most easily done using a tool like NLite. I typically produce such a disc when I build a PC for someone, with all the drivers and a few unattented installs. This results in a hands-free recovery disc, not unlike the ones you get with brand-name PCs.

      --
      -Billco, Fnarg.com
    43. Re:Reminder by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      And floppies still have some limited use in the PC world. I just used a floppy to install Kolibri OS onto an old Windows 3 machine. Also used a floppy to copy my resume from my PC to my laptop, and viceversa to copy my Netscape ISP software and Bookmarks from the laptop to the PC.

      Now one could argue "Use a USB keydrive instead" but since my laptop's USB port died, that wasn't an option. The floppy drive simply works, even if you have nothing more than a MSDOS command line interface.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    44. Re:Reminder by cdrom600 · · Score: 1

      Floppy drives are also still used in many low-end lighting control consoles (for theatre/dance/music/entertainment) which are still widely used and even sold today. The ETC Express line is the first that comes to my mind, but there are many, many others.

      The mid- and high-end controllers nowadays have USB ports, but these consoles will be around for a very long time (especially in schools, etc. where replacing [relatively] expensive pieces of equipment like this happens once every twenty years or so..)

    45. Re:Reminder by ajlisows · · Score: 1

      Well, you can just Slipstream the drivers onto a new installation CD/Flash Drive. I'm pretty sure that Microsoft has instructions for slipstreaming on their Web Site. So it isn't like you are left high and dry without a floppy.

      Most of the SATA drives up until 2006 or so will load using the standard Windows XP SP3 CD. They started cutting off support for those products after that so obviously they won't be updating the install with new drivers.

    46. Re:Reminder by jawtheshark · · Score: 1

      I have installed a Atom 330 ION motherboard (So, only SATA, no IDE, PCIe slot, no PCI slots) with that CD. No drivers needed. Qualifies as 2005 and later. No hassles.

      Granted, since this was quite recent (a few months ago), I used my SP3 CD. May not have gone with SP2: I have no way to tell. Also, people here mention nLite for slipstreaming. Not needed, you can do it with the original CD, the downloaded SP and a CD burner program.

      --
      Ahhh...the great dumpster continuum. Many a free computer will be found there. -- sowth (748135)
    47. Re:Reminder by Bungie · · Score: 1

      It is definitely the quality that has declined. During the era where you had to boot the system from and store everything on floppies, they seemed to last forever. I would boot my Mac SE every day with the same system startup disk and it was years before it actually failed. Same with the various other disks which I stored applications and documents on.

      Years later when I was working as a computer tech and needed to use floppies for boot disks, copying drivers, BIOS flashes etc. I noticed that the disks would often start to fail after a few uses. I did notice a pattern between the disk failures that leads me to believe it is caused by the quality of the disk media.

      We would often reformat and recycle disks from a large box we had. When I would recycle a Microsoft setup disk (like "Windows 95 Disk 4" for example), I would be able to use it for a very long time. When I would recycle an OEM driver disk (like "Canon BJC-250 Disk 1") they would have much shorter lifetimes. The Oki driver disks especially, would fail in their first or second use.

      --
      The clash of honour calls, to stand when others fall.
    48. Re:Reminder by Bungie · · Score: 1

      I know! This is a very frusterating problem if you need something like a SATA driver and the system doesn't have a floppy drive or even a floppy controller. There's no other way to load the driver from any other source. The only solution is to build an entirely new custom installation disk with the driver slipstreamed into it.

      --
      The clash of honour calls, to stand when others fall.
    49. Re:Reminder by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

      However, where this really could cause problems is in some embedded systems.

      Like the flammable gas recorder on the bench behind me.
      Oh well, we'll have to develop something better. Or buy a BIG box of floppies.

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
    50. Re:Reminder by archmcd · · Score: 1

      I've always felt that using words like splurt made one sound like a douche.

      --
      I'm not an expert, but I play one on slashdot.
    51. Re:Reminder by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      It's because a lot of embedded systems run on DOS which means no real USB support and often not even an IDE header (just on-board flash disk, often 16MB).

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    52. Re:Reminder by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      still last year with every piece of industrial equipment we sent to customer, we had to send along a floppy with all the test data etc
      secret is that the floppies had been empty for past 5 years or so, nobody ever bothered to check but they still demanded it

    53. Re:Reminder by Thing+1 · · Score: 1

      I remember PCs being weird and stupid.

      True that, but at least they didn't emulate the tape drive. :)

      --
      I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
    54. Re:Reminder by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I bought a box last week. I will continue to buy them. I use them. For any file under 1.4M, they are faster and easier to use than thumbdrives or SD cards because you just stick them in, copy, and eject. No cumbersome USB device closing required.

    55. Re:Reminder by Fareq · · Score: 1

      This happens for any SATA chipset (or other Mass Storage Controller) that hadn't gotten a WHQL-approved driver out before the release to manufacturing of the OS.

      Windows XP setup [boot-from-CD, for installing on machines without an OS already installed] could only load drivers during the initial setup phase from driver descriptors stored in files called "A:\TXTSETUP.OEM"

      Generally, this had to be done only for hard-disk controllers, because anything else could wait until after the OS was bootstrapped -- but if you had a SATA/RAID controller that didn't have drivers built in, you'd get a BSOD with "Inaccessible Boot Device" if you didn't have your floppy driver.

    56. Re:Reminder by billcopc · · Score: 1

      Slipstreaming a service pack, sure... nLite just provides a two-click way to do the same, but for drivers the procedure is a bit more involved, and requires modifing INF files and repackaging CABs.

      --
      -Billco, Fnarg.com
  2. points to an increasing problem with modern tech by Trepidity · · Score: 4, Interesting

    How hard is it to actually operate an obsolete system with something vaguely like the original parts? It's in an awkward gap: too obsolete for modern mass-production to be willing to sell you, yet too complicated for you to DIY it. This makes for an odd gap of basically unmaintainable infrastructure. If you want to maintain infrastructure based on pen, paper, and the abacus, you're good. And if you want to stay on the current state-of-the-art for technology (or within a few years of it), you're also good.

    But there's this weird gap in between. What if you want to play Nintendo games on a CRT fed by an RF adapter? Better either stock up on a bunch of legacy parts that were made before they stopped mass-producing them; or: find some way to ramp up your DIY tech to be able to produce that level of part; or: manage to implement something close enough in software so that your emulator is good enough.

  3. Bloody hell... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Those things still weren't dead?

  4. Yet MS insists in using it by Opportunist · · Score: 2, Informative

    Ever tried to get a driver for your HD controller into Windows during setup?

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    1. Re:Yet MS insists in using it by couchslug · · Score: 2, Informative

      "Ever tried to get a driver for your HD controller into Windows during setup?"

      Once, years ago, at which point I discovered slipstreaming (much love for nlite) and never looked back.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    2. Re:Yet MS insists in using it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pretty sure you can use optical discs (CD / DVD) or flash drives now with 7. As for XP, you can slipstream. Most HD controllers send you the driver on a floppy, though, for XP.

      Keep in mind that XP is 10 years old and is EOL very soon.

    3. Re:Yet MS insists in using it by Zumbs · · Score: 1

      Fortunately, someone came up with the idea of slipstreaming the drivers into the Windows CD/DVD.

      --
      The truth may be out there, but lies are inside your head
    4. Re:Yet MS insists in using it by brain159 · · Score: 1

      Create a variant install disc with the drivers slipstreamed in. In fact, the odds are pretty good you can get away with just slipstreaming Service Pack 3 (assuming you mean Windows XP).

      http://www.winsupersite.com/showcase/xpsp3_slipstream.asp has full walkthrough.

    5. Re:Yet MS insists in using it by kenh · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Windows 2008 allows you to use USB keys, CD-ROMs, USB floppy drives and other means to get the driver into the OS.

      Windows Server 2003 still wants a floppy disk, but there are ways around it - many server mfgs provide "virtual" floppy drives, USB floppy drives are supported, and slipstreaming the driver onto the install media is another option.

      Let's not forget that Windows Server 2003 came out about 7 years ago, just because you are installing it today doesn't change the operating system.

      --
      Ken
    6. Re:Yet MS insists in using it by Dr_Barnowl · · Score: 1

      Yeah, it's a shame that you need a working Windows installation to do that. I remember my first Windows 95 install and I really struggled with it until I discovered that you could boot from the CD-ROM.

      Later on, especially with new hardware, it's only nLite that enables you to install the OS. I haven't built a machine with a floppy drive in many years. It's a joke that XP couldn't use flash drives - the format had been more popular than floppies for some time.

    7. Re:Yet MS insists in using it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ever tried to get a driver for your HD controller into Windows during setup?

      I stopped using that ancient operating system two and a half years ago

    8. Re:Yet MS insists in using it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ever tried to get a driver for your HD controller into Windows during setup?

      Uhm.. yes, works fine, with USB stick or CD/DVD (if you are not talking about several generations old versions of Windows that were launched nearly a decade ago).

    9. Re:Yet MS insists in using it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please that was 9 years ago.

      Vista and above allow installation by USB mass storage (usb thumb, or HDD, or your digital camera...). It has support for AHCI which you shouldn't need it most of the time for your SATA installation.

    10. Re:Yet MS insists in using it by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      Ever tried to get a driver for your HD controller into Windows during setup?

      Heh. I think that's the only use I've had for a floppy in the last ten years. When I bought my first CDR burner (a shoebox sized HP 7200[1]), one of the first things I did was to take all my floppies and burn them onto a CD.

      I recently needed to do a reinstall (it's an m7700, bought when it was the latest and greatest and heaviest) and couldn't find the accursed disk. It was still inside the drive which was still sitting in my spares box, and presumably they'd both been there since the original installation.

      [1] Still got that too, somewhere.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    11. Re:Yet MS insists in using it by Poppageorgio · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but when your company still has critical programs that will only run on 2003 or earlier, you don't have a choice. Sometimes you still need that floppy. We keep a USB floppy and a stack of disks in the server room for just these times! Perfect example: NetMotion. Critical program, but will not run on 2008. Doesn't fit well into the VM environment due to multiple NICs and the need for a big ol SQL database.

      --
      Me fail English? That's unpossible!
    12. Re:Yet MS insists in using it by newdsfornerds · · Score: 1

      That's called, "innovation." Better get used to it.

      --
      Damping absorbs vibrations. Dampening is caused by moisture.
    13. Re:Yet MS insists in using it by domatic · · Score: 1

      DriverPacks is your friend for this: http://driverpacks.net/

      They have a nice automated tool that merges "driverpacks" they assemble and a volume or oem licensed installer disc you supply into a nice DVD image that contains most network and mass-storage drivers. There are some gotchas if you want to be able to do "repair installs" from such discs but reading their forums has the answer for fixing that. I believe you omit the "winnt.sif" or some such from the image. They assume you are producing a disc for unattended installs and you can either have the ability to do a repair install or an unattended install but not both on the same media.

    14. Re:Yet MS insists in using it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Once, years ago, at which point I discovered slipstreaming (much love for nlite) and never looked back.

      Yeah, and nlite has a habit of blowing shit up in certain circumstances. It's a great tool for the amateur techie wannabes at home, but for a production environment it is unsuitable, and for a lone user at home without an existing Windows machine on which to work it is unworkable.

    15. Re:Yet MS insists in using it by swilly · · Score: 1

      Vista does, but not everyone else does. I have a motherboard where the CD-ROM contains a program that will install the RAID driver onto a disk. This program only accepts floppy drives located at drive A. The CD itself doesn't have the RAID driver only the program that creates the RAID driver. I had to borrow a floppy drive from a coworker to install it.

      Of course, once I ran the program to put the RAID driver on the floppy I was able to copy them onto a USB drive for future use.

      This was in 2008 and I was amazed with this, especially considering how considerate the manufacturer was to make the program create drivers for XP, 64-bit XP, Vista, and 64-bit Vista. The perfect combination of forward and backwards thinking.

    16. Re:Yet MS insists in using it by BikeHelmet · · Score: 1

      I've been slipstreaming SATA drivers since Windows 2000. Way easier than dealing with floppies.

      I used to have to use floppy drives for BIOS flashing, but that changed about 5-6 years ago, too.

    17. Re:Yet MS insists in using it by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but when your company still has critical programs that will only run on 2003 or earlier

      Frankly, even people who wrote software on XP that doesn't run on Vista are, for the most part, just bad programmers who were doing things they weren't supposed to be doing in the first place (like assuming admin rights, or using undocumented hacks).

      But it's the first time I hear of something server-side that would run on 2K3 but not 2K8. How do you even do that? Rely on some exotic IIS6 features?

    18. Re:Yet MS insists in using it by kenh · · Score: 1

      Again, you're running 8 year-old software, it is YOU that insists on running software that requires a floppy drive, MS has moved on - your required apps have prevented you from following MS's lead...

      Their current software doesn't require floppies, their old software does.

      --
      Ken
    19. Re:Yet MS insists in using it by binaryspiral · · Score: 1

      The only Win2k3 servers I create any more are vm clones of a master. Meatspace hardware, that's so last year.

    20. Re:Yet MS insists in using it by Bungie · · Score: 1

      There are a two workarounds for those kinds of installers which may be more convenient...

      If the installer only works with files (ie. copies or created them on the disk) then you can use Disk Management to assign another volume's drive letter to A:. For example, if you have a USB key mapped to E:, you would open disk management (diskmgmt.msc), right click on the USB key's partion, and use "Change drive letters and paths" to remap E: to A:. You can also use the "subst" command to map a folder to A: as well.

      If the installer writes raw blocks of disk information then you need to use a virtual floppy disk driver which uses am image file instead of a physical floppy disk.

      --
      The clash of honour calls, to stand when others fall.
    21. Re:Yet MS insists in using it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey, I work for government. Its not me. I'm just the cog in the machine. You try getting a government official to upgrade something they like!

    22. Re:Yet MS insists in using it by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      And now let's assume you're not the computer savvy person you are but some Joe Randomuser who is already quite challenged by the idea of pressing F6 to put that disc in. If you talk to him about slipstreaming, he'll start reminding you that tailgating is not quite legal.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    23. Re:Yet MS insists in using it by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      Unless you build your own server hardware (clones) or use non supported RAID cards, having the need 3rd party driver support at OS install is moot. That's because both Dell and HP provide bootable media (ISO free to download) that starts the pre-boot setup for an OS of your choice. After swapping the disk out for the OS install media, it will already have all the drivers slip-streamed and pre-configured post install.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
  5. Re:"the end" "continues"? by baka_toroi · · Score: 0, Troll

    I don't know what a metaphor is.

    Asperger much?

  6. I hope... by CondeZer0 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    that it doesn't take this long for all other non-solid-state storage to die.

    The day when hardisk crashes and unreadable disks are things of the past is long over due.

    --
    "When in doubt, use brute force." Ken Thompson
    1. Re:I hope... by muindaur · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Price is still a major hurdle to that hope. It's more than 3K for a 1TB SSD right now and $120 for a 30GB SSD(the same price as a 1TB SATA drive.)

      In time it will replace it but not in the near future unless the prices drop to a reasonable level for a market shift.

    2. Re:I hope... by tepples · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The day when hardisk crashes and unreadable disks are things of the past is long over due.

      Solid-state storage may be more reliable than floppies, but it's not perfect. I've had a USB flash drive, an SD card, and two SD card readers fail on me. And an SSD still won't prevent file system corruption when you have hardware issues elsewhere.

    3. Re:I hope... by Enderandrew · · Score: 1

      I have a pocket flash drive that I've run through the wash twice and it still works. That is considerably better than most magnetic storage.

      --
      http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
    4. Re:I hope... by megrims · · Score: 1

      From my experience, it seems like solid state storage tends to break when the circuit board is flexed, even a little bit. Hence CompactFlash > SD-Cards.

    5. Re:I hope... by sznupi · · Score: 1

      Even when you add to the equation an adequate, for home user, backup machine (those small cheap NAS for example)...HDD storage still ends up significantly cheaper; and it should remain so for quite some time. Especially since there is some talk of another upcoming breakthrough in HDD tech (of course who knows if this talk is not also partly to calm investors in times when SSD have arrived)

      (plus you should have backup & its added cost with SSD, too)

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
    6. Re:I hope... by hitmark · · Score: 1

      that a card reader fails is a inconvenience, but not a tragedy, unlike the failure of the actual card (unless the reader fails in such a way that it manages to corrupt whatever is on the card).

      this is one worry i have with the lack of two part storage devices that can match HDDs in capacity. At least if the reader breaks you can potentially replace it (unless the media is so old its no longer available, but then there is format shifting. that is, unless its under DRM. Curse you media corporations!). In that regard tho, SD is not a perfect solution, as the storage itself is not "dumb", as there are some circuits on it to handle RW. Still, there was some talk about a new CF standard. And iirc, CF have all its logics in the reader, not the card.

      --
      comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
    7. Re:I hope... by 1s44c · · Score: 1

      Solid-state storage may be more reliable than floppies, but it's not perfect. I've had a USB flash drive, an SD card, and two SD card readers fail on me. And an SSD still won't prevent file system corruption when you have hardware issues elsewhere.

      Of course solid state drives can still break, of course they can't protect you from non-disk errors. They are however better that magnetic storage in every measurable way except price and the price will keep falling now these things are being mass produced.

      I have one in my laptop and the speed improvement is amazing. I did have to take out a 160GB magnetic disk to put in a 64GB SSD that cost about 5 times as much.

    8. Re:I hope... by PrimaryConsult · · Score: 2, Informative

      Yup. My most recently found USB drive was a nice 2GB one that I found in a *dryer* at the laundromat. I highly doubt any magnetic storage could deal with the flooding of soap and water followed by 45 minutes of heat.

    9. Re:I hope... by EdIII · · Score: 1

      I am still going to go out and buy 500 floppies and keep them in a good storage place.

      There are still some cases when installing operating systems on servers that you have choice but to use a floppy drive during the install process. That's really the only reason I can think of to still keep a USB Floppy drive and some floppies handy. Operating system installation.

    10. Re:I hope... by BikeHelmet · · Score: 1

      SD cards have virtually no error correction. It's quite easy to get silent corruption on them. SSDs are in another league - but if you use them long enough, you'll get silent corruption too.

      I like HDDs because you can usually hear them dying. :P

    11. Re:I hope... by Kjella · · Score: 1

      From what I understand the solid state storage act like mini capacitors that'll eventually lose charge. Never mind all the physical damage, short circuits and other things it might be killed from. In short, it's not very permanent. Only redundancy is permanent, I imagine with 10Mbit+ fiber connections we'll just synch to a storage service or friends and family or the cloud (buzzword alert) and our SSDs/HDDs are more for keeping our data on the go.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    12. Re:I hope... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I washed and dried my first gen iPod Nano years ago and after a week of letting it air out, it worked fine; screen and everything! And it still works to this day.

    13. Re:I hope... by greed · · Score: 1

      Different failure modes for solid-state.

      I destroyed an 8GB USB drive with an electrostatic discharge in an environment with a lot of synthetic materials (especially chair seats) and very, very, very, very low humidity. It's probable just the interface chips that were damaged, and were it truly valuable, the memory chips may well have been intact and salvageable.

      On magnetic media, it's easier to separate the solid-state (static-sensitive) part from the mechanical part (shock-, magnetism-, and so on sensitive).

      Magnetic tape, of course, stores the media separate from the electronics.

      So, once again, we're back to "diversity": multiple media categories as well as multiple copies. No one technology is flawless.

      Though it's always amazed me at how hard media is to destroy on purpose... and how easy it is to do it by accident. Rubbing a magnet over a floppy never worked for me; but accidentally putting it with a magnet would, for example.

    14. Re:I hope... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      had the same experience myself with a 128mb usb drive about... 8 yrs ago now, cost me over 100 bucks at the time, came out the other end and read no issues.

  7. Saddening... by ScottySniper · · Score: 5, Funny

    I know how they feel. There's also a lack of demand for my 3.5 inch floppy...

    1. Re:Saddening... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      It's covered in bad sectors. You need to have that looked at...

    2. Re:Saddening... by gilesjuk · · Score: 2, Funny

      Might be because it has a virus on it.

    3. Re:Saddening... by stifler9999 · · Score: 1

      The Stoned Virus, also known as brewers droop

    4. Re:Saddening... by troll8901 · · Score: 1

      Sector 001 is especially important. Make sure it's clear of debris.

    5. Re:Saddening... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe you should upconvert for more capacity

  8. So sad... too bad... by Genda · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It didn't help that with the growth of rich content, and growing sophistication (i.e. software bloat), that typical files sizes have reached or exceeded 1.44 MB. Figure Fry's today had a 32 GB thumb-drive on sale for $59.95. That's 22,756 "1.44 MB floppy disks", in a form factor that's less than 1/10th the size of the floppy. I recently found a cache of old disks, and I'm wondering what would be an environmentally friendly way to dispose of the little space wasters???

    1. Re:So sad... too bad... by Dialecticus · · Score: 4, Funny

      I recently found a cache of old disks, and I'm wondering what would be an environmentally friendly way to dispose of the little space wasters???

      Skeet.

    2. Re:So sad... too bad... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Take it to Best Buy, they recycle electronics made by anyone.

    3. Re:So sad... too bad... by Alwin+Henseler · · Score: 1

      I recently found a cache of old disks, and I'm wondering what would be an environmentally friendly way to dispose of the little space wasters???

      For starters: re-purpose them for your own use wherever possible. 2nd best option: find someone in your area that can re-use them as is.

      Failing that: drop them off at a place where recycling the actual materials is done nearby, that is: a recycling company / organization that doesn't ship the goods to the other side of the world before extracting the raw materials.

      Recycling saves energy if the raw materials take more energy to be extracted from other sources; for example, this is often the case for (precious) metals. Recycling also costs energy: to turn old junk back into raw material. Some of that energy goes into the recycling process itself, another large chunk is energy used to pick up that junk / collect / sort / transport to recycling facility. The first depends on process used, the latter is something you have a big influence on. It may be be hard to find a suitable drop-off point though (and be sure they'll do as they claim).

    4. Re:So sad... too bad... by TooMuchToDo · · Score: 1

      http://www.greendisk.com/ for disk recycling. I use them often, but am not affiliated with them.

    5. Re:So sad... too bad... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, my current printer "driver" is 193mb, while the driver for the océ large format printer is 700kb. Unfortunately, Drivers now seem to have to have spamware these days.

    6. Re:So sad... too bad... by WillDraven · · Score: 1

      I hot glued a ton of mine to a piece of cardboard, covered it with a piece of gray plexiglass from a fiber patch panel door and ran an IDE cable with a keyring threaded through it around the middle for a hanger to make some neato geek art.

      --
      This is my sig. There are many like it but this one is mine.
    7. Re:So sad... too bad... by xaxa · · Score: 1

      I recently found a cache of old disks, and I'm wondering what would be an environmentally friendly way to dispose of the little space wasters???

      My local household recycling centre takes them (as well as CDs, VHS tapes etc).

    8. Re:So sad... too bad... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Ok, so what do you do with them after you you skeet on them?

    9. Re:So sad... too bad... by fermion · · Score: 1
      It is not just data, but programs. On the Apple ][, tons of programs and data could fit on one floppy. Many of us carried a few floppies around with everything we needed, hand notched so we could use both sides. On the Apple ///, two drives were necessary as code was written with a hard disk in mind. The situation changed with the Mac with the 3.5" disks holding a bit more information. On disk would hold the systen and a couple program, the other disk the data, and we would swap. We had relatively rich data, full WYSIWG editing, with as many fonts and colors. We also had programs that fit on one floppy.

      The wide introduction of the hard disk is what caused the floppy to go away. Operating systems and programs no longer had to fit on a disk. Microsoft office went from a few disks to over 20, IIRC. We began creating more data and we did not have to woryy about managing it so it would fit on a disk. Backup was also an issue. For backup I went to IOmega in the mid 90's, then went to optical which replaced the floppy in my laptop.

      Pretty much after that the PC was the only machine with floppy, and that was only the case because the CD burning was not built in, and the PC could not handle USB drives seamlessly, a problem that has not been fixed to this day(maybe it has in MS Windows 7).

      In any case we have programs delivered on CD or DVD or online, and data is stored 'in the cloud" on solid state devices. The 1TB hard disk spelt the end of the floppy by dropping the price of storage from a $1/MB to about 0.01 cents per megabyte.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    10. Re:So sad... too bad... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you have enough, make a sprite from Space Invaders and stick them on your wall. Or, use them as pixels and make a screenshot from Tetris and put it on your wall.

    11. Re:So sad... too bad... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The best reuse of 3.5 floppy disks I've seen is to turn them into notepads. Each floppy is the front and back cover of the notepad. Take them to an adventurous copy shop and have them run the floppys through a spiral binder machine with paper in between.

    12. Re:So sad... too bad... by c++0xFF · · Score: 1

      My brother used to glue two AOL CDs together. Not quite the same thing as clay pidgins, but so much more satisfying.

      And in full sun, the shards are quite pretty.

    13. Re:So sad... too bad... by uberjoe · · Score: 1

      This works for me. All you need is some zipties.

      --

      The days of the digital watch are numbered.

  9. My ATM pin was 1457664 at one point. by AbRASiON · · Score: 2

    RIP FDD :(

    1. Re:My ATM pin was 1457664 at one point. by polymath69 · · Score: 1

      If that's supposed to be the number of bytes on a disk, it must have been a strange-looking creature.

      First we factor out 512 bytes per sector. That leaves 2874. Now 2874 has a prime factorization of 3 * 13 * 73. Since those are all prime the best possibility is that you're describing a three-sided floppy with 13 sectors per track and 73 tracks. (Or is that a 73-sided floppy with 13 tracks of 3 sectors? There are only 6 possibilities, none of which make any sense.)

      --

      --
      I don't want to rule the world... I just want to be in charge of mayonnaise.
    2. Re:My ATM pin was 1457664 at one point. by gringer · · Score: 1

      Now 2874 has a prime factorization of 3 * 13 * 73

      2874 is divisible by 2, so there should be a 2 in there somewhere. I get 2874 = 2*3*479.

      --
      Ask me about repetitive DNA
    3. Re:My ATM pin was 1457664 at one point. by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      Now 2874 has a prime factorization of 3 * 13 * 73.

      You swapped two digits. 2847 has that prime factorization.

      2874 has 2 * 3 * 479.

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    4. Re:My ATM pin was 1457664 at one point. by mrnobo1024 · · Score: 2, Informative

      On a 1440kB floppy formatted by MS-DOS, there's a boot sector, two FATs (9 sectors each), and a root directory large enough to hold 224 32-byte entries (14 sectors).

      That makes (2880 - 1 - 9 - 9 - 14) * 512 = 1457664 bytes available for files.

    5. Re:My ATM pin was 1457664 at one point. by AbRASiON · · Score: 1

      Any nerd who owned Xtree Gold and a 1.44mb drive can confirm.
      1457664 bytes free.
      1213952 bytes free.

    6. Re:My ATM pin was 1457664 at one point. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Kill yourself.

    7. Re:My ATM pin was 1457664 at one point. by AbRASiON · · Score: 1

      Hello stoofoo loser.

    8. Re:My ATM pin was 1457664 at one point. by Civil_Disobedient · · Score: 1

      All the cool kids were MaxiDisking their floppies to 1.6Mb.

  10. what has replaced the floppy? by FuckingNickName · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Reasons I like floppies:

    1. Give-away-able - if I want to give someone a file, I can hand them a floppy with it on. No, not every circumstance involves having Internet access and not every document should be sent across the tubes. Nor does everyone who I want to give something to necessarily have a computer on them for me to slot my USB key into.

    2. Long-life - most of my floppies from the '80s and '90s are still readable. Can't say the same for hard drives, and certainly not so for CDs/DVDs a few years old. IME a floppy is much likely to be readable in any floppy drive than a CD/DVD in a random CD/DVD drive, too.

    3. I just drag-drop; no fucking burning/converting/e-mailing/something else process!

    3. Everything boots from them. USB booting seems to be hit and miss on many motherboards, and software to support USB booting is more scarce.

    1. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by FuckingNickName · · Score: 1

      In before, "They have 4s now, grandad."

      Dammit.

    2. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      1. Give-away-able - if I want to give someone a file, I can hand them a floppy with it on. No, not every circumstance involves having Internet access and not every document should be sent across the tubes. Nor does everyone who I want to give something to necessarily have a computer on them for me to slot my USB key into.

      I'm actually now finding that USB sticks are give-away-able. Lots of companies are often giving away free branded usb sticks and I got another one that came with my new work laptop. So I have 3 attached to my keyring in various sizes (512mb, 1gb and 2gb) and when I need to give someone something I just hand them a stick, I normally get it back but if not it's not a biggy to me at all.

    3. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree. And also, I doubt that most of his floppies from the 80s are still readable.....

    4. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      Well to be fair most of that you can do with a CD or DVD -R or -RW. There were even various attempts to make drag and drop work - UDF and Mount Rainier and even DVD-RAM, though I still use ISO because it's compatible with everything.

      El Torito booting should work on pretty much any machine now - it's a lot less hit and miss than booting off USB.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    5. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 3, Funny

      Armaments, chapter two, verses nine through twenty-one:

      And the Lord spake, saying, "First shalt thou take out the Holy Pin. Then shalt thou count to three, no more, no less. Three shall be the number thou shalt count, and the number of the counting shall be three. Four shalt thou not count, neither count thou two, excepting that thou then proceed to three. Five is right out. Once the number three, being the third number, be reached, then lobbest thou thy Holy Hand Grenade of Antioch towards thy foe, who, being naughty in my sight, shall snuff it.

      --
      Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
    6. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      1: CDs are give-able too.
      2: Maybe in the 80s they made quality floppies. Anything you can buy today is a complete piece of shit that has a 50% chance of not being readable by another machine 5 minutes after being recorded.
      3: Slightly faster than burning, but recording a full floppy still takes some time definitely not instant.
      The second 3 which you presumably meant to be 4: how many modern computers even have floppy drives in them? Floppy booting support still sucks, but CD booting is very common on any hardware made in the last decade or so, and next to universal to anything younger than 5 years.

      But I do wish we had disposable USB drives. If they now sell 32GB USB drives for $60, why can't they make a 256MB USB drive for $1? It's not like the material cost of a few grams of plastic is higher than a buck, and the manufacturing technology has been around for ages. That to me is the threshhold price of disposability.

    7. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by tepples · · Score: 1

      Lots of companies are often giving away free branded usb sticks

      How can I get in on such an offer?

    8. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by tepples · · Score: 0, Troll

      Well to be fair most of that you can do with a CD or DVD -R or -RW.

      Not really. FuckingNickName seems to think CDs get damaged more easily than floppies.

      There were even various attempts to make drag and drop work - UDF and Mount Rainier and even DVD-RAM, though I still use ISO because it's compatible with everything.

      So you have to make a choice between "a floppy is much likely to be readable in any floppy drive than a CD/DVD in a random CD/DVD drive" and "no fucking burning".

    9. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "2. Long-life - most of my floppies from the '80s and '90s are still readable."

      Bullshit.

      Sure some may be readable but I'd say 8 out of 10 floppies i've formatted in the past 5 years have failed with read/write errors.

      Floppies are shit.

      Now I've got CD-Rs from 1999 that are still readable. I've got about 300 CD-Rs from that period and only one has had issues and I was able to restore it eventually.

    10. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by FuckingNickName · · Score: 1

      Yes, I use(d) DVD-RAM internally precisely for its "large floppy" rewriteability. But not all drives support it and the discs aren't cheap.

      El Torito works absolutely fine if your burn is good enough for the drive and the unforgiving BIOS you're throwing the medium in, and if your burning tool, BIOS and bootloader are in agreement. You're better off with good +-R than +-RW for reliability, of course, but as well as waiting for the burn you have the physical wastage.

      As the AC above implied, the full replacement will probably end up being small USB keys (although I wish SD slots had just become standard) at the price of a floppy. Eventually. Perhaps.

    11. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by tepples · · Score: 2, Informative

      Slightly faster than burning, but recording a full floppy still takes some time definitely not instant.

      "no fucking burning": you don't have to start a separate application (such as Nero, InfraRecorder, or Brasero) and create a "new project" to put files on a floppy. Instead, floppies mount like SD cards or USB flash drives (or more accurately vice versa).

      But I do wish we had disposable USB drives. If they now sell 32GB USB drives for $60, why can't they make a 256MB USB drive for $1?

      USB is still patented. Even after the patents expire sometime around 2020, there's still the cost of a connector, a PCB, a case, and a drive controller, which don't vary based on capacity. It's not like CD-R, where you can go from jewel boxes to a spindle to save money.

    12. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by FuckingNickName · · Score: 1

      Sure some may be readable but I'd say 8 out of 10 floppies i've formatted in the past 5 years have failed with read/write errors.

      They might not make floppies like they used to, but your drive is probably bad. This is certainly going to happen if you have an unmaintained drive which you suddenly put into service after a decade of dust-gathering.

      Now I've got CD-Rs from 1999 that are still readable. I've got about 300 CD-Rs from that period and only one has had issues and I was able to restore it eventually.

      Then you are very lucky, especially if you're reading on a different drive. Although a good quality CD-R from that period is like a good quality early floppy, in that it's before manufacturers tried everything to cut corners, and it doesn't degrade like rewriteable optical media.

    13. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by eric-x · · Score: 1

      4. They look much better than cd's
      4. They're easier to store because they're square and smaller than cd's
      4. They're don't get lost as easily as an usb stick because they're larger.
      4. No need for jewel cases.

    14. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by kerrbear · · Score: 1

      I don't know what kind of 3.5s you were buying but mine failed regularly. I think I still have some in storage and I would wager they are all hosed. But I dunno, maybe I was buying the cheapo floppies. I can't remember.

    15. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by sznupi · · Score: 1

      As for very cheap USB drives, there are still some options - look up Data Traveler Mini Slim from Kingston. I'm sure it can be made even simpler / cheaper; with the case using even less material than DT Mini Slim and being one block of plastic, or with controller and flash integrated in one chip.

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
    16. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. Give-away-able - if I want to give someone a file, I can hand them a floppy with it on. No, not every circumstance involves having Internet access and not every document should be sent across the tubes. Nor does everyone who I want to give something to necessarily have a computer on them for me to slot my USB key into.

      They don't have a usb mass storage device with them (for example any mobile phone or mp3 player) but they have a computer with a disk drive?

    17. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by itsdapead · · Score: 1

      1. Give-away-able

      Yet, for most of the last decade, blank CD-ROMs have been cheaper than blank floppies ever were. I think that there is a psychology problem there: CD-ROMs "feel" more valuable than floppies because of the price of music CDs.

      Although you dismiss email, I think that is the main reason for the lack of interest in a FD replacement. In my experience, people even use email for sneakernet - they send the email, print off a copy and walk down the corridor to discuss it.

      There does seem to be a gap in the market for bulk packs of cheap <1GB flash drives, though.

      2. Long-life - most of my floppies from the '80s and '90s are still readable.

      Only if you still have a floppy drive (I'd have to extract one from a defunct PC and install it in a less defunct one). OTOH DVD, DVDHD and BluRay drives should still read CD-Rs. I think the long-time readability of CD vs Floppy vs HD is a case of "your mileage may vary": neither is particularly secure.

      3. I just drag-drop; no fucking burning/converting/e-mailing/something else process!

      Dunno if you're still using "telnet 25" but in most modern email clients you just drag-n-drop. No fucking finding the zip code, writing an envelope, buying a stamp, walking to the mailbox...

      However, I'd agree that writing a CD is still more of a faff than it should be - although all modern OS's let you drag, drop and burn. "Packet writing" didn't seem to go anywhere (and you had to finalize the disc to ensure readability, so you might as well have burnt a batch).

      3. Everything boots from them.

      Same correction: everything with a floppy drive boots from them. Virtually everything will boot from CD these days.

      But you're right: there has been no direct replacement for the floppy - no single device that hits all the spots. My theory:

      • When the 3.5" disc came out there were several potential competitors (at least two 3" systems - including the one later used in the Amstrad PCW). However, once IBM (and Apple) went with the Sony system, it was all over. When the floppy was up for replacement in the late 90s there was no one flagship PC manufacturer with the sort of influence IBM had back in the day. Apple were at their lowest ebb (and when, after a brief dalliance with Zip, they bounced back with the iMac, it had no floppy equivalent) so no one system was anointed winner.
      • The huge amount of "legacy" 3.5" floppies led to lots of lame attempts to produce a backwards-compatible system, when a completely different mechanism was really needed. Plus, your point about booting was a big issue then.
      • At the time, I'd have put my money on a data version of the Sony Mini-disc - but Sony went with the backward-compatible superfloppy route instead.
      • The main contender, the Zip drive, suffered from horribly expensive, single-supplier media (and maybe reliability problems).
      • CD-R pwned the cost-per-megabyte contest as soon as you stopped needing SCSI and an ultrafast HD for mastering.
      --
      In a survey of 100 programmers, 111111 thought that duck-typing was a good idea.
    18. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by troll8901 · · Score: 1

      IME a floppy is much likely to be readable in any floppy drive than a CD/DVD in a random CD/DVD drive, too.

      Interestingly, I found that my Sony-branded CD-ROM drive (CDU 522x series) is especially good for data recovery from unreadable CD-R discs.

      I've verified the data integrity by copying a ZIP file. It works.

      For me, I also usually have trouble with bad sectors on 5.25" and 3.5" floppies.

    19. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by Bearhouse · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Reason I hate floppies:

      Sector not found. Abort, Retry, Ignore?

    20. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by FuckingNickName · · Score: 1

      Wait, what? Unlike decent bus standards, and ignoring occasional "On-The-Go" support, USB still has a "one host, many devices" philosophy. Your phone usually isn't able to act as a USB host, even if the internal chipset has pins to support it. And even then, it probably doesn't have a type A socket. It may support SD, not to be confused with mini-SD, not to be confused with micro-SD, or some variant of some form factor or electrical standard which might just happen to coincide with what you have the equipment to write to, of course.

      As for computers with floppy disk drives - yes, back at the office/wherever, pretty much. I give you something now to deal with when you're ready (a much more efficient way of living than expecting you to deal with it right now, fwiw).

    21. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1: CDs are give-able too.

      I liked (mini) floppies because I could stuff 1 or 2 in my shirt pocket or a business envelope. While there are mini-CDs as well, they're not as inexpensive as their bigger kindred, they don't come with an integral scratch protector, and they won't abide as much flexing before they crack.

    22. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      But with SD cards AFAIU the controller is in the reader, so this should have the potential to give very cheap low-capacity floppy replacement (and it's smaller than USB sticks anyway). And about licensing: If the patent holder is any smart, he'll make the licensing for low-capacity sticks/cards cheap.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    23. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "no fucking burning": you don't have to start a separate application (such as Nero, InfraRecorder, or Brasero) and create a "new project" to put files on a floppy. Instead, floppies mount like SD cards or USB flash drives (or more accurately vice versa).

      With any recent Windows system you can just mark files, right-click and choose to burn to CD/DVD, and I believe UDF is supposed to make RWs work kind of like floppies, altho I have never tried that.

    24. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      You don't need Jewel cases for CDs either. There are paper hulls for them which work quite fine.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    25. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by hitmark · · Score: 1

      technically, xp or later can do basic burning. But its a odd process in that one open the cd/dvd-rom in the file manager and then drop files into that window.

      also, anything below cd-rw are worm media, once written, cant be altered. Ok, you can give the illusion, by writing multiple tracks, but that eats up space equal to the full size of the file multiple times. And a CD-rw can only be rewritten about 1000 times, thanks to a cd-r based calibration area. Not sure if the problem exists on a dvd-rw tho.

      --
      comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
    26. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      So you have to make a choice between "a floppy is much likely to be readable in any floppy drive than a CD/DVD in a random CD/DVD drive" and "no fucking burning".

      Well yeah. But I said writeable optical media can do most of what a floppy does, not all. Actually I can live with having to use Nero to burn stuff.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    27. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      My favorite is the OCZ Secure Digital Dual, it fits into SD on one end, and USB on the other. It's the size of an SD card, smaller really if you take off the little SD-format-fitter, which is unnecessary in most applications. It only makes it bigger and shields the USB connector, which is static-protected anyway.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    28. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by FuckingNickName · · Score: 1

      Agreed on the reason for the lack of predominant standard replacement - good summary. A good quality CD-R might cost about the same as a floppy disc today, although I can't stand the physical waste of using one (even with old magazine cover floppies people got to know which used good enough media to blank and repurpose). Perhaps I should see a CD-R as a floppy reusable about 400 times - if only all drives+operating systems did.

    29. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps what is needed is a reasonable rise in a standard format for memory sticks, such that you could have a generic card reader which could even be in a usb form factor but accept a flash card which could be very cheap to produce at small sizes...

    30. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by sznupi · · Score: 1

      But TBH, even though I described one possible direction towards cheap disposable storage (and you pointed out a bit different one)...personally I consider it a waste of resources.

      I would think and hope that mobile phones with enough storage and connectivity, allowing exchange of files between them (and with PCs; if exchanging files via net is not desirable in given scenario), will become widespread enough for another such storage medium to be unnecessary. Some manufacturers and carriers, even when the technical capability is there, outright block such usage of course... :/

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
    31. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by Vellmont · · Score: 1


      1. Give-away-able - if I want to give someone a file, I can hand them a floppy with it on.

      And what happens when your friend looks at you like you're crazy and says "I don't think my computer even has a floppy drive!"?

      Long-life - most of my floppies from the '80s and '90s are still readable. Can't say the same for hard drives

      I've had largely the opposite experience. Floppy disks have lost data for me from one day to the next. They're a terrible storage medium. 15 years ago I worked in a computer lab, and people complaining about losing data on floppy drives was an every day experience. Hard drives on the other hand retain data for decades if you leave them powered off.

      Strangely though, the old 5 1/4 disks were a lot more robust for me than the 3 1/2. I was able to recover data from them 20 years after the data was stored, and the disks were in extremely poor storage condition.

      3. I just drag-drop; no fucking burning/converting/e-mailing/something else process!

      Much like a USB drive.

      3. Everything boots from them. USB booting seems to be hit and miss on many motherboards, and software to support USB booting is more scarce.

      Which is true if your computer actually HAS a floppy drive in it (most don't), and the thing you want to boot actually fits on a floppy disk.

      --
      AccountKiller
    32. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't have to start separate programs to burn CDs on Windows or OS X either. No idea about Linux. Just drag and drop.

    33. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by Sir_Lewk · · Score: 1

      Go to talks and conferences. You'll come back with a bucket full of them.

      --
      "linux is just DOS with a UNIX like syntax" -- Galactic Dominator (944134)
    34. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by FuckingNickName · · Score: 1

      0. Everyone I work with has an internal or USB floppy drive. What home office or business wouldn't have the ability to read the most common data transfer medium across the past 30 years?

      1. How many hard drives have you spun up and read from successfully after 20+ years ("decades") of being powered off?

      2. Agreed on 5.25" vs 3.5". But what were people with lab access doing as recently as 15 years ago keeping their only copy of data on floppy? It's obviously much less suitable as a day-to-day storage medium than even the cheap USB sticks, and I'd not claim otherwise. I'd anticpate the same sort of issues if people stored their data only on CD-RWs in their pockets.

      3. Straight USB floppy BIOS support has IME been better than USB mass storage boot, i.e. copying a primary bootloader to the floppy etc. So I'll plug an external drive in if needed.

    35. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by newdsfornerds · · Score: 1

      Everything boots from CDROMs and DVDs these days, and nearly all computers have them installed. Most computers built in the past 10 years have DVD drives and no floppy drives. Death to the deamoness floppy!

      --
      Damping absorbs vibrations. Dampening is caused by moisture.
    36. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by itsdapead · · Score: 1

      0. Everyone I work with has an internal or USB floppy drive. What home office or business wouldn't have the ability to read the most common data transfer medium across the past 30 years?

      YMMV. I work with a bunch of Mac users and most of those have a USB floppy drive somewhere in their attic - I religiously made sure they were ordered with new Macs once Apple stopped building in floppies sometime last century, but as it turns out, they didn't get used much.

      Even when I have retrieved old files from floppies, it frequently turns out that they are useless without the software that created them - we've lost a lot of stuff in Pagemaker (the new version won't load it and its not quite valuable enough to try and retrieve it).

      The hard truth is that a digital archive will die unless it is actively maintained. Even then, some of it will become useless as technology changes.

      I've created a lot of things in my life which are now either lost or rendered curiosities because technology has moved on (including 2 years spent working on a project using interactive Laservision discs*). I guess it is just an occupational hazard. However, if our race survives for another few centuries I think future historians are going to find a big black hole in the record circa 2000 AD.

      (*No, not the BBC Domesday project - although that suffered the same fate, with added irony).

      --
      In a survey of 100 programmers, 111111 thought that duck-typing was a good idea.
    37. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by itsdapead · · Score: 1

      A good quality CD-R might cost about the same as a floppy disc today,

      Quick unscientific search shows Sony floppies at £2.37 for 10 and Sony CD-R at £14.49 for 100. So CD-Rs are appreciably cheaper per disk, and vastly cheaper per MB.

      Perhaps I should see a CD-R as a floppy reusable about 400 times

      Knock a zero off that because there's a whopping great overhead of 13-20 MB per session. Still knocks the spots off most other media for price/MB though.

      I've noticed that CD-RW doesn't really seem to have taken off - when they first came out I did the math and decided that I'd be unlikely to re-use CDs efficiently enough to make up for the extra cost.

      --
      In a survey of 100 programmers, 111111 thought that duck-typing was a good idea.
    38. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by FuckingNickName · · Score: 1

      So CD-Rs are appreciably cheaper per disk

      At this level what matters is absolute cost to give away the odd floppy, not relative, and there's really no appreciable difference between 15p and 24p. But it does become relevant once you have to think about losing a few quid per USB key.

      Of course, you could go for a Verbatim pack of 10 floppies at £1.40.

      Knock a zero off that because there's a whopping great overhead of 13-20 MB per session

      With packet writing?

    39. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by sznupi · · Score: 1

      Unfortunatelly (as usual) the availability of such ultra-affordable USB pendrives is only the case in places...where there is also the least need for them.

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
    40. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by itsme1234 · · Score: 1

      I've created a lot of things in my life which are now either lost or rendered curiosities because technology has moved on (including 2 years spent working on a project using interactive Laservision discs*). I guess it is just an occupational hazard. However, if our race survives for another few centuries I think future historians are going to find a big black hole in the record circa 2000 AD.

      I strongly disagree with the "black hole" statement. Barring some "Mad Max" (or worse) future there will be information overload about current times, at least compared with how we view recorded history today. Yes, maybe we'll need many times more information if future generations want to experience "holodeck quality" Paris ~2000AD but compared with past times we're doing great. There will be tens of thousands of pictures from any stupid place you can imagine (I'm not talking about Louvre and such). There will be a lot of crap archived just "because we can". Never mind Sandra Palin's yahoo emails but think about for example Obama's Amazon (or Ebay or Paypal or Amex) purchases. As it happens much of the digital data we generate is lost; you can't guarantee some specific data will be there tomorrow unless you take great care to make backups verify them, etc. But we generate so much digital data that even if some really small portion survives it's still a lot of it left. Compare this with past times. There are countries where the whole history, everything they know about themselves can be saved on a floppy disc. Put yourself in the past, anywhere before the "digital revolution". 1950AD? 1850AD? 1500AD? 500AD? 1000BC? What were the chances of your projects (whatever they could be in those times) could survive even 50 years after your death (assuming you didn't know the future so you could "trick the system")?

    41. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by itsdapead · · Score: 1

      Of course, you could go for a Verbatim pack of 10 floppies at £1.40.

      I'm sure there are cheaper CD deals too - but the elephant in the room is that modern document sizes will eat up even a 2.8 MB floppy pretty rapidly.

      Knock a zero off that because there's a whopping great overhead of 13-20 MB per session

      With packet writing?

      Depends if you have to finalize it to send to someone without packet writing support. Does anybody use this?

      --
      In a survey of 100 programmers, 111111 thought that duck-typing was a good idea.
    42. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by LinuxIsGarbage · · Score: 1

      Tick tick tick tick whir whir (30% done) tick tick tick tick tick tick whir whir (56% done) Tick tick tick tick whir-whir whir-whir whir-whir whir-whir (99%) whir-whir whir-whir whir-whir whir-whir whir-whir whir-whir Not ready reading drive A:. Abort, Retry, Ignore

      Die floppies so I can piss on your grave.

      http://www.annoyances.org/exec/show/article09-122

    43. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by tepples · · Score: 1

      Perhaps what is needed is a reasonable rise in a standard format for memory sticks

      "Memory sticks" - Do you work for Sony? And if so, why is your standard format so much more expensive than optical discs?

    44. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by tepples · · Score: 1

      Go to talks and conferences.

      In my case, the money for airfare to get to the cons would probably outweigh what I'd save vs. buying the drives online for $10 each.

    45. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by LinuxIsGarbage · · Score: 1

      CD-RWs didn't take off because people were using Packet writing on them which was deathly unreliable. I generally used CD-RWs as multi-session. When the session overhead got too bad, copy to hard drive, erase and put the original content back on. Currently I use RWs for things like testing, boot discs, and things like Ubuntu which obsolete every 6 months. I wouldn't trust the data as much as a DVD-R or CD-R, but knock on wood I haven't had reliability problems with RWs.

    46. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by Vellmont · · Score: 1


      What home office or business wouldn't have the ability to read the most common data transfer medium across the past 30 years?

      Homes or offices that've bought a computer in the past say 7-10 years when floppy drives started not appearing in computers. The last time I used a floppy was to flash a BIOS maybe circa 2003. Even that need has disappeared as MB makers have within the last 5 years or so finally realized they can't require people to flash a BIOS from a floppy.

      1. How many hard drives have you spun up and read from successfully after 20+ years ("decades") of being powered off?

      At least one. What makes you think an unpowered hard drive is suddenly going to go bad? I've only tried two that old. The other one didn't work when it was powered off so it's not surprising it didn't work 20 years later.

      But what were people with lab access doing as recently as 15 years ago keeping their only copy of data on floppy?

      I don't know. People that didn't understand how volatile the things were?

      3. Straight USB floppy BIOS support has IME been better than USB mass storage boot

      Every PC built in the last 15 years has had the ability to boot from CD-ROM. There's also far more boot discs on CD than their are on floppy.

      Your points would have had some relevance 7-10 years ago, but the era of the floppy drives is long since passed.

      --
      AccountKiller
    47. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by BikeHelmet · · Score: 1

      2. Long-life - most of my floppies from the '80s and '90s are still readable.

      And most manufactured after 2000 are dead. :P

      Can't say the same for hard drives, and certainly not so for CDs/DVDs a few years old.

      I can. I have CDs and DVDs from a decade ago that still work fine. Some friends of mine have a business computer running DOS off Fujitsu drives from ~1995.

      3. I just drag-drop; no fucking burning/converting/e-mailing/something else process!

      It's not *that* difficult to burn stuff or email it. You lose about 1 minute. You gain that back in transfer times to/from the floppy.

      3. Everything boots from them. USB booting seems to be hit and miss on many motherboards, and software to support USB booting is more scarce.

      Yes, USB booting is quite messed up on a lot of motherboards - but booting from CD always works. I haven't seen that fail in almost a decade.

    48. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by FuckingNickName · · Score: 1

      External USB floppy drives are like £20. If you're dealing with any nation/business which doesn't have an obsession with being first on the technical upgrade treadmill, you'll have a lower bound of one floppy appearing per year - and that's enough to justify the expense.

      At least one. What makes you think an unpowered hard drive is suddenly going to go bad?

      Famous last words. Stiction, i.e. stuck heads or dried out bearings, often cured by freezing the drive or banging it appropriately carefully.

      I've only tried two that old.

      Well, then... :-)

      There's also far more boot discs on CD than their are on floppy.

      But if you're having trouble booting off a CD/DVD, your best bet may be to do initial bootloading from a floppy, chaining via a more forgiving routine.

    49. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by Vellmont · · Score: 1


      Stiction, i.e. stuck heads or dried out bearings, often cured by freezing the drive or banging it appropriately carefully.

      A problem solved around 15 or 20 years ago by parking the read/write heads in a special landing zone.

      I've only tried two that old.

      Well, then... :-)

      I still stand by my statement. There's really no reason a hard drive is suddenly going to "go bad" sitting on a shelf somewhere. Meanwhile I've seen many floppy disks spontaneously have unreadable sectors from one day to the next. Hard drives sit and operate for YEARS powered up 24/7 is hot environments and operate flawlessly Sitting on a shelf somewhere unpowered is such a tame environment compared to what they normally operate in, it's very unlikely you'll ever experience data loss.

      --
      AccountKiller
    50. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by djrobxx · · Score: 1

      I can still read the CDs I burned in 1994. Philips CDD521 burner, Ricoh media. Blanks were around $35 a piece.

    51. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by mirix · · Score: 1

      0. Everyone I work with has an internal or USB floppy drive. What home office or business wouldn't have the ability to read the most common data transfer medium across the past 30 years?

      I've got a grand total of one machine with a floppy on it, an old IBM uh.. x345? server, in the basement. I don't even remember how to mount a floppy; It's been that long.

      --
      Sent from my PDP-11
    52. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      "no fucking burning": you don't have to start a separate application (such as Nero, InfraRecorder, or Brasero) and create a "new project" to put files on a floppy. Instead, floppies mount like SD cards or USB flash drives (or more accurately vice versa).

      What ancient-ass OS are you using that doesn't have built-in CD-R support? Shit, even Windows XP will do that no problem.

      If this is a problem for you, maybe you should finally trade-up that Commodore 64, buddy. Join the rest of us in the 21st century.

    53. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by TheOutlaw · · Score: 1

      2. Long-life - most of my floppies from the '80s and '90s are still readable. Can't say the same for hard drives, and certainly not so for CDs/DVDs a few years old. IME a floppy is much likely to be readable in any floppy drive than a CD/DVD in a random CD/DVD drive, too.

      I still have a CD of Dark Forces for DOS that still runs. I also have a CD-R that was burned in around 2000 and is still readable as well. I have other CD's that are from the mid to late 90's that work quite well still but I think Dark Forces is my oldest.

    54. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by FuckingNickName · · Score: 1

      A problem solved around 15 or 20 years ago by parking the read/write heads in a special landing zone.

      There's no reason why the heads can't get stuck in the landing zone - what do you think a landing zone is? Make wiser use of the same search engine you used to write that incorrect statement to find out how many people can't spin up drives which have been in storage for a few years.

      There's really no reason a hard drive is suddenly going to "go bad" sitting on a shelf somewhere.

      You can stand by your unsubstantianted statement with contrary evidence for as long as you want; but if you're not trolling then you're just making a recipe for future loss of your valuable data. FWIW, this is the only way I've ever lost data, about 5 years ago: not because it's the only drive it's happened to, but because it happened to a drive which (pebkac) wasn't properly backed up.

    55. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah right. Except if you have this crazy os, I think it is called windows, really obscure thing. It comes with pretty much transparent handling of rw cds. Rightclick send to Blabla drive or dragging it over does the job. But who uses Windows anyways....

    56. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Rightclick send to Blabla drive or dragging it over does the job.

      He addressed that in this post.

    57. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by eric-x · · Score: 1

      Excellent point.. but fruitless, there are still 4 points.

    58. Re:what has replaced the floppy? by Nyder · · Score: 1

      I agree. And also, I doubt that most of his floppies from the 80s are still readable.....

      Not true at all, I have a ton of floppy disks for C64, Apple II's and Amiga Computers.

      5.25", 3.5" SD, DD. and even HD's. (Thats Single Density, Double Density, and of course High Density)

      Most the disks I have work just fine.

      And you know how hard it is to find SD & DD disks these days? Without paying out the nose for them?

      --
      Be seeing you...
  11. Re:"the end" "continues"? by EdZ · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "The end of Floppy Disks" has occurred every year for the past decade or so.

  12. Re:"the end" "continues"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have Aspergers and I know what a metaphor is, you insensitive clod! /not the AC in the OP

  13. Next up, the mainframe! by kenh · · Score: 1

    I can't wait for the mainframe to finally succomb to market realities and die - the mainframe has been on the verge of extinction for my entire career in computing, which started in the mid-80's...

    To borrow a line from Monty Python, "(It's) not dead yet!"

    --
    Ken
    1. Re:Next up, the mainframe! by VampireByte · · Score: 1

      Probably going to be waiting a while. Mainframes are still heavily & widely used in banks.

      --

      Run and catch, run and catch, the lamb is caught in the blackberry patch.

    2. Re:Next up, the mainframe! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You must have missed the marketing message that mainframes are now called "Cloud Computers"

    3. Re:Next up, the mainframe! by gatkinso · · Score: 1

      Mainframe tech has made a huge comeback in recent years.

      Sure it is sexily bundled up, called Vmware, Xen, what not... but that's what it is - updated mainframe technology running on your PC (which btw is orders of magnitude more powerful than many corporate mainframes from the 80's). Even the term "hypervisor" harkens back from the mainframe days.

      Where have you been?

      --
      I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
    4. Re:Next up, the mainframe! by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      what "market realities"? Sales of mainframes were down because of recession, but that's temporary. Large banking, market financial, and database systems require them and their exclusive capabilities, there will be no end to demand for mainframes. With economy recovering, outlook for 2nd half 2010 sales for mainframes such as IBM z11 is looking very bright.

    5. Re:Next up, the mainframe! by not-my-real-name · · Score: 1

      Why do you want mainframes to die? Do you actually have to deal with them or is this a philosophical objection? What do you propose to replace them with?

      It actually appears that market realities have led to a resurgence of mainframes after they had been mostly written off. People discovered that there were some things (not everything) that mainframes did very well.

      --
      un-ALTERED reproduction and dissimination of this IMPORTANT information is ENCOURAGED
    6. Re:Next up, the mainframe! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You obviously had a career in computer cleaning.

    7. Re:Next up, the mainframe! by kenh · · Score: 1

      Was my sarcasm too subtle?

      I started my career as a mainframe operator, then Programmer/Analyst, then supporting mainframe application development software users, then working to migrate a "Ma Bell" Telco application from MVS/IMS DB & DC environment to Sun Solaris and Oracle.

      I never understood why everyone, for the last 20+ years, thought the mainframe was dying... I bet I could do another 20 years as a mainframe programmer if I wanted to...

      --
      Ken
    8. Re:Next up, the mainframe! by kenh · · Score: 1

      Like process great big honkin data sets quickly? But how many people need to do work like that?

      The power of mainframes is not just in the silicon, but in the languages and programming styles, IMHO.

      --
      Ken
    9. Re:Next up, the mainframe! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The mainframe is far from dead. In fact, hiring for mainframe employees is probably higher than it's been in ages thanks to the retiring baby boomers. Verizon uses a mainframe to respond when you punch #BAL into your phone, among other things. Hell, even OS/2 is making a bit of a comeback. eComStation is releasing a new version. IBM is talking about it again. Zombie computers never die.

  14. Re:"the end" "continues"? by Hognoxious · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Ends can have beginnings. At least, Winston Churchill thought so. http://www.quotationspage.com/quote/24921.html

    So presumably ends must be able to continue, or we'd never reach the actual end of the end.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  15. Close to death... Not quite by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    Yes, it's extremely unreliable and prone to failure and data loss. Yes, the storage space is pathetic. Yes, many modern computers don't have a drive to use it. But there are still some cases where it can be better than the alternative: when you need to record something very fast, very cheap, and very small.

    E.g.: college. Professors and instructors are still stuck in the 80s and demand students give a "physical" copy of their work, rather than accept it by e-mail or online CMS. The typical college student, naturally, would not bother recording the work on a physical medium until 2 minutes before class. CD recorders are just a tad slower than floppies, and besides, colleges don't like upgrading their computers that often, so even today many labs and libraries have computers with a floppy drive but not a CD burner. So floppy to the rescue.

    And, of course, any sysadmin stuck with legacy hardware that can, in lieu of a hard drive with an OS, can only boot off a floppy.

    Flash keys are far better for personal data storage of all but the largest data sizes, to both CDs and floppies, but unfortunately even the smallest data-size flash drives are too expensive to use as a discardable medium, akin to a CD or floppy. Still waiting until small-sized flash drives sell for less than $1 a piece, so we can record something on them and give away without consequence.

    1. Re:Close to death... Not quite by jshackney · · Score: 1

      E.g.: college. Professors and instructors are still stuck in the 80s and demand students give a "physical" copy of their work, rather than accept it by e-mail or online CMS. The typical college student, naturally, would not bother recording the work on a physical medium until 2 minutes before class. CD recorders are just a tad slower than floppies, and besides, colleges don't like upgrading their computers that often, so even today many labs and libraries have computers with a floppy drive but not a CD burner. So floppy to the rescue.

      Thank you, I just figured out the last time I used a floppy disc (or even had the drive installed in my computer). It was 1998/99. Several of our labs upgraded to new computers and I upgraded to a 64 MB USB stick. I disposed of several dozen 3.5" discs and kept everything I wanted/needed on that thumb drive.

    2. Re:Close to death... Not quite by Renraku · · Score: 1

      $1 small sized flash drives probably won't happen. It's a large economic step to make a flash drive of any size. It's a tiny economic step to go from 1GB drives to a 32GB drive.

      --
      Job? I don't have time to get a job! Who will sit around and bitch about being broke and unemployed then?
    3. Re:Close to death... Not quite by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. The floppy disk is more reliable than the CD-R or the DVD-R.

      2. Professors and instructors often don't have floppy drives any more. Also, floppies hideously slow if you want to push ~500kb or more of data onto them -- you lose most of the time savings over burning in slow transfer rates (burning a meg of data onto a CD is perceptibly instantaneous -- most of the time in the drive will be spent doing the formatting crap, which still won't take long.

      3. Kicking and screaming into the 21st century... ok, Hope you have 5.25" disks for your //e's. Seriously, it's usually cheaper to emulate to drive legacy hardware. For custom hardware, get some solder and electrical tape out and look for a guide to make a serial-to-X or USB-to-Y adapter to match your device's connector, and look for/make a driver. If that's not feasible, start looking for a replacement.

      4. If you DO have a justification for using them, then floppies aren't disposable anymore (ha).

      It's often important in tech to take a BIG step back and decide whether it's really worth it to maintain an antiquated device. If you stand on one leg, tilt your head, and squint, you can justify keeping a functional typewriter in the office for filling out pre-printed forms and oddly-shaped documents...but it's a stretch. If you just WANT to use a typewriter (or a quill and inkpot), go for it, but don't expect mainstream industry to keep providing ribbons as anything other than a luxury good.

      Also, if you want to cry about a technology getting lost, weep for microfilm -- stable beyond the wildest dreams of ordinary digital media, relatively compact, and no real worries about future readability -- failing a proper reader, all you need is a focused light source and a microscope.

    4. Re:Close to death... Not quite by colinrichardday · · Score: 1

      1. The floppy disk is more reliable than the CD-R or the DVD-R.

      I'm not so sure. I have found optical media to be more robust than floppies.

    5. Re:Close to death... Not quite by meatmanek · · Score: 1

      Well, the CMSes aren't much better. Blackboard, for example, is stuck in the 90s: it still uses frames for layout.

      The defaults that schools pick probably don't help much either; at my school, the upload feature limits storage to 200MB per class; even in a relatively small class, that's 10 megs per assignment IF the professor clears it out between projects.

  16. Re:"the end" "continues"? by mikael · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Because there are two or three manufacturers of 3.5" floppy disks - there aren't any more manufacturers entering the market, so it is a slow decline. You can still buy 3.25" disk drives as a option for a new PC (+$10) just in case.

    It's strange to think that back in the 1990's, we used to think 1.44 Megabytes of storage was extremely generous. Just about every student would have at least one or two solid plastic disk boxes (ten disks each). The most exotic disks would be multi-colored

    Now the disk themselves are being recycled into bags and other useful objects

    --
    Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
  17. Where can I get a usb 5.25 drive? Anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe this is a good place to ask if anyone knows where I could get a 5 1/4" floppy drive with a usb attachment. It's no problem finding them in 3 1/2", but I need a 5 1/4". Also, do any modern motherboards support two floppies? I have a bunch of 5.25 and 3.5 floppies that I need to archive, and the last 2 pc's I've encountered only supported one floppy drive installed - no a: and b:.

  18. Re:"the end" "continues"? by sentientbeing · · Score: 4, Funny

    The last time I used a floppy disk, it was to strip out the flexible platter inside to use as a UV filter for the solar eclipse

    That was in 1999

    --

    ------
    beware he who would deny you access to information, for in his mind he dreams himself your master
  19. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by tepples · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    What if you want to play Nintendo games on a CRT fed by an RF adapter?

    All cartridge-based Nintendo consoles that have RF output also have composite output, except for the Japan-only original Famicom and the rare top-loading NES. The front-loading NES, as well as all Super NES, N64, GameCube, and Wii consoles, has a composite video output.

    or: manage to implement something close enough in software so that your emulator is good enough.

    In that case, you still need to ramp up your DIY tech in order to make a cartridge reader so that you can copy your Game Paks to the PC to make ROM files for use in an emulator. Retrode doesn't support NES yet.

  20. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by SIGBUS · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This seems to be true with technology in general. Railway museums are a good example of this; the steam locomotives with their more-or-less blacksmith level technology have a better future as working exhibits than 1930s-era diesels. The restoration of the Flying Yankee streamliner required a great deal of effort to recreate the long-out-of-production injectors for its obsolete diesel engine.

    As another example, the Seattle Museum of Communications has several working telephone switches representing a variety of different switching technologies. The most recent of these is a Western Electric #3 ESS, a small computer-controlled analog switch that was built in small quantities and was obsolescent when it rolled off the production line. It has a variety of proprietary chips that will never be made again, and spare parts are extremely scarce since most of the #3s built were scrapped. Contrast that with the 1920s-era panel switch, a Rube Goldberg contraption for which parts could be fabricated by any competent machine shop.

    --
    Oh, no! You have walked into the slavering fangs of a lurking grue!
  21. Re:Where can I get a usb 5.25 drive? Anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.deviceside.com/fc5025.html ... but you need a 5.25" drive to attach to it. It acts as a controller/interface.

  22. Hmm... by Mindcontrolled · · Score: 1

    Guess I gotta hoard some drives and floppies for my ancient data recovery and preservation projects soon.

    --
    Ubi solitudinem faciunt, pacem appellant.
  23. Giving a copy of a file to someone by tepples · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Figure Fry's today had a 32 GB thumb-drive on sale for $59.95.

    True, a USB flash drive is good for carrying your own files around. But floppies, CD-R, and DVD-R have the advantage of being so cheap they're disposable, which lets you give a copy of a file to someone else.

    1. Re:Giving a copy of a file to someone by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      True, a USB flash drive is good for carrying your own files around. But floppies, CD-R, and DVD-R have the advantage of being so cheap they're disposable, which lets you give a copy of a file to someone else.

      If the file you want to give away can fit on a floppy, you're better off just e-mailing it.

    2. Re:Giving a copy of a file to someone by hitmark · · Score: 1

      unless the person needs the files to get online in the first place. Like say drivers for a network card...

      have happened to me, and my solution was to "waste" a CDR on the person (the file took up about 1% of the capacity of the cd).

      --
      comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
    3. Re:Giving a copy of a file to someone by hitmark · · Score: 1

      a 10-pack of small thumb drives would have been lovely. Thing is that what i see around storage lately is that the price stays level, but the capacity slowly climbs. Basically, as production processes improve, its being used to create higher capacity devices, while the price level is maintained. I wonder if the prices on storage devices have hit the "pain" threshold, where if it drops any lower, there is no profit to be had on the sale.

      --
      comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
    4. Re:Giving a copy of a file to someone by tepples · · Score: 1

      I wonder if the prices on storage devices have hit the "pain" threshold, where if it drops any lower, there is no profit to be had on the sale.

      That's how it has always been explained to me. Nobody wants to spend the research and development money to cut costs to make a disposable USB flash drive because disposable writable media already exist in the form of CD-R and DVD+R.

    5. Re:Giving a copy of a file to someone by kybred · · Score: 1

      But floppies, CD-R, and DVD-R have the advantage of being so cheap they're disposable, which lets you give a copy of a file to someone else.

      But how do I email the floppy to them?

    6. Re:Giving a copy of a file to someone by green1 · · Score: 1

      my solution was to "waste" a CDR on the person (the file took up about 1% of the capacity of the cd).

      Is it a "waste" when the CDR is less expensive than the floppy disk that you would have preferred? Just because the floppy is closer to the file size doesn't mean that it is the better choice.

    7. Re:Giving a copy of a file to someone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But floppies, CD-R, and DVD-R have the advantage of being so cheap they're disposable, which lets you give a copy of a file to someone else.

      You've obviously never been around the marketing department after a trade show or product re-branding.
      They'll have pallets full of unwanted USB sticks or other goodies.

    8. Re:Giving a copy of a file to someone by wvmarle · · Score: 1

      I have the feeling it has more to do with the overall manufacturing (including materials) and development costs. That is a certain cost related to these devices that will not go lower.

      It requires some metal and plastic (cheap), and some more exotic stuff for the actual chips. Those will be the costly part. And when manufacturing improves the same amount of material and work can store more data. And there may simply be no cost savings on having a lower storage capacity on the drive.

      Indeed for some reason the bottom of the market is missing in USB drives. And I am seeing the same in the digital camera market, in that market there is also a bottom missing (as in really simple and low-cost devices; like the single-use cameras that had 36 exposures and then you just gave the whole thing to the photographer for development).

      And so on: many high-tech markets do not have a low-end line it seems. It's just not there. Using maybe yesterday's tech, low cost, still good enough for many uses where cost is an issue.

    9. Re:Giving a copy of a file to someone by Anubis350 · · Score: 1

      I have a *jar* of 512-1gb flash drives (with some larger, up to 16gb right now) sitting on my desk. I get them at conferences and events, I havent paid for a USB drive in years. That's pretty cheap to me, and yes, sometimes I do just give them to people with files on them~

      --
      "goodbye and hello, as always" ~Prince Corwin, from Zelazny's Amber series
    10. Re:Giving a copy of a file to someone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That goes back to the mention of "environmentally friendly." Too many physical goods already work under the assumption that resources and trash space are practically unlimited.

    11. Re:Giving a copy of a file to someone by hitmark · · Score: 1

      your telling me that the cost of the metal contacts and plastic of say a SD card can not be pushed down so low that a 10 pack of them would be more expensive then a single larger capacity SD card?

      --
      comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
    12. Re:Giving a copy of a file to someone by hitmark · · Score: 1

      its a waste because he, or someone else could later have reused for the floppy, while the CDR is write once.

      --
      comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
    13. Re:Giving a copy of a file to someone by wvmarle · · Score: 1

      More like the actual electronics in it. That's the expensive part, and probably can't be made cheaper (material cost - they may use exotic materials, and development cost).

    14. Re:Giving a copy of a file to someone by hitmark · · Score: 1

      huh? would not the material costs of the larger (in essence, using more transistors and such) chips be the same as multiple smaller ones? that is, if by shrinking the circuits so that one can fit a larger IC on the same size, could one not fit multiple smaller ones?

      --
      comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
    15. Re:Giving a copy of a file to someone by green1 · · Score: 1

      then use a CDRW, still cheaper than the floppy disk.

    16. Re:Giving a copy of a file to someone by hitmark · · Score: 1

      not at the time, i think the price of a box of cd-rw was about 1.5 times the cost of a box of floppies, at least.

      also, a CDRW still requires specialist programs to wipe, unless microsoft and such recently started building support right into their file managers...

      --
      comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
    17. Re:Giving a copy of a file to someone by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      Hold it up in front of your webcam and use the capture mode!

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    18. Re:Giving a copy of a file to someone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, I've got a number of old flash drives (1 gig or less) that I pass around with little expectation of getting them back -- in practice, people remember to return them about half the time. So, I just lost a 256MB drive. Whoop.

      You're right in another sense; for mass physical distribution, it's still better to use CD-R/DVD-R -- the flat form factor makes shipping easier, if nothing else, and if the creator's system is clean, it means that a disk that's getting passed around ISN'T picking up autorun malware crap along the way. There's one more little bonus: a Blu-Ray drive will play even old CDs, but a USB port (alone) won't read a floppy.

      Coincidentally, I just checked and disposed of my last stack of personal-use floppies a month ago. Found a few old photos, a couple old papers. Woo. Nice to know the things lasted for over a decade, unlike some of my CD-R's.

    19. Re:Giving a copy of a file to someone by BikeHelmet · · Score: 1

      You can get rewritable CDs and DVDs for under a dollar.

      Be environmental! And get them to pay you a dollar, in case they forget to bring the DVD back. :P

    20. Re:Giving a copy of a file to someone by tepples · · Score: 1

      And get them to pay you a dollar, in case they forget to bring the DVD back. :P

      But if they pay you for the media, then you're engaging in "commercial distribution", which often needs a separately negotiated license.

    21. Re:Giving a copy of a file to someone by tepples · · Score: 1

      But then you have to figure in the cost to fly to a trade show and back.

    22. Re:Giving a copy of a file to someone by networkBoy · · Score: 1

      not really.
      There is a non trivial amount of space used on the memory chips that is not storage, but rather support circuitry. This would have to be replicated for each device, whereas if it was a larger capacity device this circuitry is only needed once. Also, this is not the type of stuff the reader can have and "share" among devices. It is specific to that device (trimmed analog values and such) burned in at wafer sort.

      --
      whois gawk date unzip strip find touch finger mount join nice man top fsck grep eject more yes exit umount sleep dump
    23. Re:Giving a copy of a file to someone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Considering you can get 4gb for 5 euro's in most bigger shops and 2gb for the same price as smaller one's... Why bother with the floppy anyway?

      (boundary)

    24. Re:Giving a copy of a file to someone by dangitman · · Score: 1

      But floppies, CD-R, and DVD-R have the advantage of being so cheap they're disposable,

      I take it that you haven't checked the price of floppies lately. They are not cheap.

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    25. Re:Giving a copy of a file to someone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Give a file to *someone*?

      No, with floppies, you could give - the same or different - files to 22,756 different people. Try that with the one USB stick costing the same.

      Besides, did anyone ever get PCs to reliably boot from one of these things? Not just your own, but every PC you might need to fix? Including booting DOS 6.22 for flashing the BIOS?

    26. Re:Giving a copy of a file to someone by hitmark · · Score: 1

      was not at the time, and even now they need special software to be written. Or did microsoft include a "erase RW media" in their format system in vista or W7?

      --
      comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
  24. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by Alwin+Henseler · · Score: 4, Interesting

    How hard is it to actually operate an obsolete system with something vaguely like the original parts?

    A bit like maintaining a classic car, I suppose: a combination of using old replacement part stocks, and (occasionaly) newly fabricated parts where it doesn't hurt the overall look & feel. Or hurts the owner's taste...

    If you're careful with your classic [whatever] and don't use it everyday, such old stocks can go a long way. And there's always the option to take 3 halfway broken ones, and make 2 working ones out of those.

  25. But, but..."all Sony standards fail" by sznupi · · Score: 1

    So many failures...Betacam, CD, Hi8, miniDV, HDV, DAT, S/PDIF, AIBO; (some in collaboration)

    --
    One that hath name thou can not otter
    1. Re:But, but..."all Sony standards fail" by srussia · · Score: 1

      So many failures...Betacam, CD, Hi8, miniDV, HDV, DAT, S/PDIF, AIBO; (some in collaboration)

      If you consider these failures, how would you describe the minidisc?

      --
      Set your phasers on "funky"!
    2. Re:But, but..."all Sony standards fail" by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      So many failures...Betacam, CD, Hi8, miniDV, HDV, DAT, S/PDIF, AIBO; (some in collaboration)

      The CD was a failure?

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    3. Re:But, but..."all Sony standards fail" by Yvan256 · · Score: 1

      You can add the Memory Stick to that list. It's not a failure as such, but why did Sony create their own memory media standard when there was already too many options on the market? Same thing goes for the xD-Picture Card of Fujifilm and Olympus.

    4. Re:But, but..."all Sony standards fail" by jo_ham · · Score: 3, Informative

      I can't work out if you're being sarcastic or not.

      DAT dropped right off the radar, superceded by MiniDisc in the pro market. Betacam was the standard in professional video for years, and has evolved into HDCAM and continues to go on. If you watched TV in the late 80s, the 90s and all of the 2000's then you have definitely watched a *lot* of VT coming of a Betacam deck. HDV has firmly established itself in the consumer market, and you pretty much get s/pdif for free on all audio gear these days.

      Hi8 had a brief time in the spotlight, but was always destined to fail since S-VHS tapes had the physical compatibility bonus going for them, where Hi8 was stuck as an incompatible tape size.

    5. Re:But, but..."all Sony standards fail" by Tapewolf · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure what HDV is, but all the others were successes - either arguably or definitively - which I presume was his point. Some of these are obscure or may be misinterpreted so I'll elaborate on the ones I know:

      I think digital Betacam is still in use, though it seems to be being replaced by video servers nowadays. S/PDIF is on virtually every soundcard - higher end ones in particular.
      DAT was eventually obsoleted but was the de-facto standard for professional audio and CD duplication for some years, though it was a flop in the consumer marketplace owing to the DRM.
      The CD goes without saying. Hi8 and miniDV seemed to do okay and Hi8 was the medium which some of TASCAM's multitracks were built around, e.g. the DA38.

    6. Re:But, but..."all Sony standards fail" by Donkey_Hotey · · Score: 1

      ... but why did Sony create their own memory media standard when there was already too many options on the market?

      Hubris.

      --
      (There is supposed to be a Sarcmark® here, but my $1.99 check hasn't cleared, yet...)
    7. Re:But, but..."all Sony standards fail" by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      The collaborations seem to have worked. CD and s/pdif were collaborations with Philips, who had the sense not to keep too tight a rein on the technology. The others were all niche products. None of them gained mass consumer support.

    8. Re:But, but..."all Sony standards fail" by sznupi · · Score: 1

      Of course I was.

      DAT was a de facto standard (not in consumer market of course) for quite some time; not a failure, it has simply become obsolete recently...oh well, time flies. Also, Hi8 (and Video8) were at least as popular (and from what I remember at my place...more popular), in home compact cams, as VHS-C.

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
    9. Re:But, but..."all Sony standards fail" by DamageLabs · · Score: 1

      At that time SD was not yet standardised, only MMC card was. But, Sony wanted a memory card and a expansion bus, which wasn't even discussed on the SD front. At the time Sony was selling a camera and a bluetooth memory stick, SD was just beginning to take hold. CF was too big for PDAs and cameras.

      Sony needed their own standard since other formats were not advanced enough. And they wanted to use it across the board - in all their products - so licensing costs were also an issue.

    10. Re:But, but..."all Sony standards fail" by Yvan256 · · Score: 1

      The size of CompactFlash isn't really a problem if you compare it to Memory Stick. What bugs me is that SD, Memory Stick and all the others weren't even able to see a decade forward and they had to introduce half a dozen variations to both formats (SD-HC, MS Pro, MS Pro Duo... etc). The only one that seems to have stayed the same (and kept up with capacities) is CompactFlash.

  26. The real reason by 6Yankee · · Score: 4, Funny

    Sony can't fit a decent rootkit on a floppy...

    1. Re:The real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Information for the uninitiated: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/sony_rootkit

      Fuck sony btw.

    2. Re:The real reason by wvmarle · · Score: 1

      And no more boot-sector viruses.

    3. Re:The real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, they probably could, but I'm sure it'd raise a few eyebrows when a person wonders why there's no room to place a 5k file on an "empty" floppy disk.

  27. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by arielCo · · Score: 1

    How hard is it to actually operate an obsolete system with something vaguely like the original parts?

    You don't - either recycle it or set up a time capsule for it. I'm sure you have better things to do with your time on Earth.

    Technology falls behind - get used to it. What if I want to keep writing my letters in a mechanic typewriter? What if I miss New Coke? Unless I can afford my own metalworking shop / chemical plant / brewery AND have the time to spare, I'll have to roll with the times. As for nostalgia, you may well have an objective appraisal of the newer stuff. It's not like Doom beats the snot out of Halo ;)

    --
    This post contains no rudeness or derision of any kind. All arguments are friendly. Terms and exclusions may apply.
  28. Re:"the end" "continues"? by Enderandrew · · Score: 1

    Thankfully most of the motherboards I've purchased in the past few years allow me to load BIOS updates from USB storage. I think that was one of the last major uses for a floppy.

    --
    http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
  29. No more floppies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Damn, how will I continue to make Goatse Rescue Floppies?

  30. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by Trepidity · · Score: 1

    It does feel weirdly like living on borrowed time, though. It's something that, apparently, nobody can make anymore, but you can straggle on because at some point in the past they made a whole lot of them.

  31. Good news! by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1

    If you take a soldering iron, and you create a hole in it, it doubles in size!

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    1. Re:Good news! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ow.

  32. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by Trepidity · · Score: 1

    Great examples, thanks! It's something I think about periodically, which seems to relate to different kinds of steady states. There are some things that, at any reasonable point in the future, we can expect to recreate if we need to. But there are other things that are very dependent on the precise current conditions, which sounds uncomfortably chaotic. If you take "what 100 smart people could recreate in a year if they had to" as our safe fall-back position, there's increasingly a really large gap between the current state-of-the-art and that safe fallback.

  33. Sony: Oh yes we can by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 4, Funny

    Sony: Oh yes we can... oh wait. No we can't. That is right. So rootkits on our floppies at all. No sirree. Wouldn't fit see. Yeah.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

  34. Re:"the end" "continues"? by asCii88 · · Score: 1

    So ends of ends can also have beginnings. And first we would reach the begining of the end of the end, which would continue until we reach the beginning of the end of the end of the end which would continue until we reach the beginning of the end of the end of the end of the end, which would continue until we reach the begi...

  35. Getting a slipstreamed disc? by tepples · · Score: 1

    Due to copyright law, nobody can sell you a slipstreamed XP disc but Microsoft, and Microsoft would rather sell you a copy of a new operating system that needs more CPU, more RAM, and more battery power, and has less support for the applications and peripherals that you already use.

    1. Re:Getting a slipstreamed disc? by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Luckily, slipstreaming your own XP disc is fairly trivial, and can even be done on Linux. I've done it by hand and with a tool, on Windows and on Linux, and when it works it's great :p It's the drivers that resist slipstreaming that I find problematic, although supposedly some tools will package them back from an installed system for you.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    2. Re:Getting a slipstreamed disc? by Zumbs · · Score: 1

      It's the drivers that resist slipstreaming that I find problematic

      How does a driver resist slipstreaming? And which drivers have you experienced these problems with?

      --
      The truth may be out there, but lies are inside your head
  36. Re:"the end" "continues"? by asCii88 · · Score: 1

    What about rescue disks?

  37. Inflation by michaelmalak · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Flash drives today cost less than floppy disks in 1988.

    Although the Bureau of Labor Statistics puts $1.00 in 1988 at $1.87 today, the real rate of inflation is much higher. From a popular perception standpoint, Wal-Mart's low prices are masking the double-digit inflation in healthcare, education, and housing (prices are still historically high relative to wages). From a BLS calculation standpoint, BLS pulls dirty tricks like considering only rents instead of home purchase price, considering that houses in West Virginia are equivalent to houses in Arlington, Virginia because they're in the same Census Metropolitan Statistical Area, and considering that an actual DVD player price should be adjusted down 50% because it's technologically superior to a VCR.

    Shadowstats.com, which uses pre-Clinton formulas to compute CPI, now has a free calculator. Without a subscription, it requires Photoshop to measure the bar heights, but I've measured that $1.00 in 1988 is over $5.00 today.

    512MB USB thumb drives can be had for $3.99.

    And that's compared to a 3.5" floppy disk. To try to add some fairness, I avoided a comparison with 5.25" floppies in 1982, which were $1.50 then.

    When new formats are introduced, there is a discontinuity in prices. It makes for a sawtooth graph. You're cherry-picking the edge of the sawtooth and whining about it.

    1. Re:Inflation by hitmark · · Score: 1
      --
      comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
    2. Re:Inflation by Vellmont · · Score: 1


      Without a subscription, it requires Photoshop to measure the bar heights, but I've measured that $1.00 in 1988 is over $5.00 today.

      Or you can cheat, and look at the HTML and compare the bar chart heights (the website designer leaked the information in the html)

      1988: height="14.3024381783758"
      2010 BLS: height="26.7179366588835"
      2010 ShadowStats: height="80"

      80/14.30 = 5.59 2010 dollars/1988 ShadowStat dollar.
      26.719/14.30 = 1.87 2010 dollars/ 1988 BLS dollar.

      Who needs a subscription when these guys are leaking easily gotten information in their HTML?

      I find the figure of 5.6 times inflation since just 1988 ridiculous. I remember 1988, and goods+services aren't 5+ times as expensive today as they were then. You're right about education and health care costs rising, and lowering prices of a DVD player compared to a VCR seems crazy as well.

      --
      AccountKiller
  38. Re:"the end" "continues"? by c6gunner · · Score: 1

    What about rescue disks?

    What about them? I started using CD's for that in 1998. These days, it's all USB.

  39. ouch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I know one industrial laser I used to program boots from a floppy - a 720K floppy to for good measure. Best get a box in I advised them. Don't work there anymore thank goodness

  40. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Same thing happened with the original Apollo flight tapes/video. NASA is the only one with the machine that can still read the stuff and I think original slow scan video might be impossible or nearly impossible to read now due to technology missing.

  41. Are floopies still used to upgrade the BIOS? by walterbyrd · · Score: 1

    As I remember, just a few years ago you needed a floppy to upgrade some system's bios.

    1. Re:Are floopies still used to upgrade the BIOS? by bogie · · Score: 1

      Maybe on some 5+ year old machines but anything newer should be done via the OS.

      --
      If you wanna get rich, you know that payback is a bitch
  42. Re:"the end" "continues"? by pjt33 · · Score: 1

    If you want to grumble about the quality of the English in the summary, why not point out that 1981 didn't really see its heyday in the 1990s?

  43. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by hitmark · · Score: 2, Insightful

    and these days we are becoming more and more dependent on large corporate production facilities that end up becoming "to large to fail".

    --
    comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
  44. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by hitmark · · Score: 3, Insightful

    i wonder if there should be some kind of public domain requirement for obsoleting stuff like that. Basically, when production is shut down, all specs and production processes are handed over to some archive in human readable form.

    --
    comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
  45. Re:"the end" "continues"? by maxwell+demon · · Score: 5, Funny

    Yes, but the beginning of the end, the beginning of the end of the end, the beginning of the end of the end of the end, etc. form a converging series. The point of convergence is the ultimate end point, where all ends ultimately end.

    More interesting are intervals like the beginning of the end of the beginning, or the end of the end of the beginning of the end of the beginning of the beginning of the end. Their extremal points (i.e. the set of limits of those series) form a Cantor set in time, unless you have a case where the end of each beginning is already the beginning of the end. In that case the limits are dense in time, i.e. during the whole interval between ultimate beginning and ultimate end you are continuously experiencing both beginnings and ends.

    --
    The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
  46. What do you mean "continues"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apple dropped the floppy in 1998, that was 12 years ago. Even the comments from PC users so far, right here on Slashdot, seems to indicate that a lot of technical people haven't used a floppy disk in nearly a decade.

    The floppy is dead, and so are the parallel port, the serial ports* and Adobe Flash**.

    * FTDI makes reliable USB-to-serial cables with drivers for the three main operating systems so stop bitching about the lack of serial ports on new computers.
    ** Mwahahaha!

    1. Re:What do you mean "continues"? by FuckingNickName · · Score: 1

      Or, it seems to indicate that Slashdot is full of Apple users.

    2. Re:What do you mean "continues"? by makomk · · Score: 1

      Apple didn't care whether there was any usable alternative to the floppy when they dropped it. By all accounts, there wasn't.

    3. Re:What do you mean "continues"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      CD-RW was introduced in 1997 and has a capacity from 580 to 737 MB, much more than a 1.44 MB floppy disk.

    4. Re:What do you mean "continues"? by yuhong · · Score: 1

      On the matter of Apple floppies, remember the 400k/800k GCR floppy? The continued prominence of Mac Pluses was the biggest reason why they stuck for so long.

  47. AOL by flyingfsck · · Score: 4, Funny

    Bought? Were you working in the purchasing department of AOL?

    --
    Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
  48. Cannot find server by tepples · · Score: 1

    E-mail isn't helpful if you happen to be away from Internet access at the time you want to send the file. Nor is it helpful if the file is a computer program; many e-mail clients delete computer programs from e-mail attachments because they can't tell your legit program from a worm.

  49. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by Bearhouse · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Yeah, but beware of the myth of the 'parts car'. The same components tend to wear out on all examples of a series. My neighbour bought two 'classic' cars - one supposedly the 'runner', and the other as a reserve of spare parts.
    Since he was not really good at car repairs, I was round his place every weekend, (he WAS good at sharing his stock of excellent wine...)
    Guess what - whenever something broke on the 'good' car, the equivalent on the 'parts' car was just as busted...

  50. Niche market will be there for decades by Vadim+Makarov · · Score: 1

    due to scientific instruments, for which it's not uncommon to have 20-30 years lifetime, and as others have pointed out due to industrial equipment with similarly long lifetime. In CNC mills for example, replacing a part of the controller is not as easy as it sounds: it's a triple redundant machine, very conservatively tested for safety.

    --
    17779 eligible voters in a district, 17779 'vote' as one. This is Russia.
    1. Re:Niche market will be there for decades by acohen1 · · Score: 1

      For one of classes during my last semester at school I used a scope running some sort of embedded windows that saved traces to a 3.5" floppy drive. It was required to copy these into a report for one of the class projects. This was only about 2 years ago.

  51. CF == ATA by tepples · · Score: 1

    And iirc, CF have all its logics in the reader, not the card.

    CompactFlash is parallel ATA in a different form factor. A lot of early SSDs for PCs were CF cards plugged into a wire adapter (Google cf ide). The electronics for a USB CompactFlash writer and a USB ATA enclosure are almost identical, except that the CF writer will have more robust hot swapping. You're thinking of SmartMedia and xD-Picture cards, which really are just a NAND flash chip on a package. And CF isn't perfect either; I've lost a writer to bent pins.

  52. The end is long ago by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm not too sure if my floppy works. I think I remember replacing it around three years back, haven't actually tested it yet.

  53. Niche market? by davidwr · · Score: 1

    I hope someone continues to make niche-market media formats, even if it's only on a special-order basis. If I had a museum piece or industrial computer that used these I'd hate to rely on disks made in 2009 two decades from now.

    Sure, the shells can be re-used, but the media can go bad over time and the paper or cloth that contacts the media should not be re-used if it is the least bit dirty.

    Anyone know where I can get a new blank Recordio platter?

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  54. Dont copy that floppy! by cleancut · · Score: 1

    Given Sony's forays into drm, I think eliminating yet another means of copying is the real reason.

    1. Re:Dont copy that floppy! by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      I think a video compressed to 1.44MB will not be very useful anyway. And even with MP3, if you want any half-decent quality you'd not get more than a single song on a floppy (unless the song is very short, of course).

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
  55. Re:"the end" "continues"? by jhoegl · · Score: 1

    AoL appreciates your scientific use.

  56. If you've got the plans... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You can build from scratch, like the A1 Steam Locomotive Trust did.

    Granted, it takes some time to re-create a class of main line locomotive that went to the scrappers nearly 50 years ago, but the second one should be quicker to build!

    SEE the engine,
    WATCH Jeremy Clarkson shovel coal into it!

    Top Gear Race to the North

    As for computers

    Colossus (reconstruction)
    Manchester Baby (reconstruction)
    Pegasus (original)

  57. Vintage computers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about Commodore 64s and Amigas? I know I've hoarded some good old floppies. There must be a market for known good NOS floppies.

  58. A new low by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So now Slashdot stories are reduced to Viagra plugs?

  59. Windows 95.... Windows XP by markass530 · · Score: 3, Funny

    I still remember as a 15 year old *ahem* downloading from alternate sources a copy of windows 95, then copying it to 25+ floppies and installing it. Painstaking, brutal fear of some error. It worked though.. Then when I buy a computer in 2003, and of course have no floppy drive in it (Configured on purpose that way) imagine my suprise when the only way to reinstall XP onto my sata drive is via FUCKING FLOPPY.

    1. Re:Windows 95.... Windows XP by LinuxIsGarbage · · Score: 2, Informative
    2. Re:Windows 95.... Windows XP by acohen1 · · Score: 1

      To be fair, you could have slipstreamed the sata driver into the install disc if you have access to another computer and a cd burner. Motherboards that came out not long after that had the correct logic onboard so the xp installer no longer needed drivers.

    3. Re:Windows 95.... Windows XP by markass530 · · Score: 1

      this was back in the day, was getting back into computers after taking a 3 year sabbatical.. didn't know much, so No at that point I couldn't have slipstreamed anything

  60. As long as they continue the 5.25" floppys I'm ok by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm still using them to install my raid drivers as I am forced to load Windows XP before I confirm the upgrate to vista to finally install Win 7 upgrade.

  61. Save Icon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's funny that a generation will grow up where the save icon is a device that they have never seen in real life.

  62. Re:"the end" "continues"? by MrMr · · Score: 3, Insightful

    But what will end first; The 3.5" floppy or the "the end of floppy disks is nigh" stories?

  63. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by drolli · · Score: 1

    You can also emulate HW with a decent effort nowadays. Take an CPLD with few 10000 gates, throw 2 DACs in the output and buy an signal source and an IQ modulator. I am pretty sure that iff you have a CRT with an RF input (e.g. a television - which I btw dont own for 11years) and you are into it (which i am not)then it will be not so difficult to simulate the whole signal path up to the output (given anybody attached it to a Network Analyser).

  64. BIOS/Firmware/CMOS updates by newdsfornerds · · Score: 1

    Why can't the manufacturers use bootable ISO9660 images? To update my LSI RAID card I have to boot to floppies? GAH!

    --
    Damping absorbs vibrations. Dampening is caused by moisture.
  65. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you miss New Coke, you can buy it at any shop in America. If you miss Coca-Cola Classic, you're going to have to wait for Passover.

  66. Yet... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    KDE still shows a freaking 1440-KB 3.5" drive in the places in Dolphin.

  67. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by Nadaka · · Score: 1

    He must have made a poor selection with his parts car. The best parts cars are retired long before they wear out significantly, preferably from a rear end collision that will leave most of the parts subject to wear intact.

  68. Still use'em... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...to capture screenshots from my oscilloscope. If the lab I work in didn't have PCs with floppy drives then I'd have to resort to taking a picture of the oscilloscope screen with a digital camera. The oscilloscopes are very high quality Agilents and the cost of replacing them would be very high.

    1. Re:Still use'em... by LinuxIsGarbage · · Score: 1

      No RS-232 interface? I've used many scopes with and without floppy drives that did have RS-232.

  69. Re:"the end" "continues"? by Antony-Kyre · · Score: 1

    My math book still comes with a 3.5" disk. Fortunately, it's not required for the class. I had to remove my floppy drive to put in a second HDD.

  70. Coasters by BountyX · · Score: 1

    Damn, now I have to use CD's as coasters. I find their reflective properties highly annoying.

    --
    Trying to install linux on my microwave, but keep getting a kernel panic...
    1. Re:Coasters by itsdapead · · Score: 1

      Damn, now I have to use CD's as coasters. I find their reflective properties highly annoying.

      Plus, the coffee runs through the hole in the middle.

      Don't panic - the computer industry made it through the great "what, no surplus punched cards*? how can I take notes when I'm on the telephone!!!" crisis of the 1980s.

      (*If a punched card hasn't been punched, is it a punched card?)

      --
      In a survey of 100 programmers, 111111 thought that duck-typing was a good idea.
  71. The iMac will fail with no floppy drive!!! by MadCow42 · · Score: 1

    I remember the headlines... and the general reaction here at the time. Didn't happen. :)

    MadCow.

    --
    I used to have a sig, but I set it free and it never came back.
  72. Re:"the end" "continues"? by Blkdeath · · Score: 1

    What about rescue disks?

    You can't put hardly anything on a rescue floppy. Conversely, I can put a full suite of diagnostic tools, partition software, anti-virus applications, password recovery tools and then some on a CD and still have plenty of room for expansion. Alternatively, I can put an entire usable Linux distribution on a CD.

    I haven't used a rescue floppy in well over a decade.

    --
    BD Phone Home!

    Shameless plug. Like you weren't expecting it.

  73. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by BetterSense · · Score: 1

    Cameras as well. Any decent wood shop could make a bellows-camera given some leather, wood and glass. A smart watchmaker could probably keep repairing mechanical pre-1950s small-format cameras like early Leicas forever. But the electro-mechanical cameras from the 70s-90s are in this awkward stage as well. Nobody makes them anymore or shows any sign of starting. When one breaks, the only solution is to cannibalize another one for the circuit boards and proprietary parts. So you have a situation where very old film cameras will last forever and be fixable, or you can use a new digital camera, but if you happen to be a fan of the very very nice film cameras that were made in the 70s and 80s, the supply is dwindling and when it's gone, there will literally be nothing that can be done. It's economically impossible to make the parts for them ever again.

  74. A use for old floppy disks... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I bought a bunch for a dollar at a thrift store and used them as nerdy coasters.

  75. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by TheLink · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Even if you can read it, you cannot rebuild it so easily.

    There are so many dependencies and inter-dependencies.

    Say, we get nuked to stone age, even if you knew how to build everything, to rebuild something like an Intel chip fab would be extremely difficult. If the pure silicon crystals have been destroyed, you will need to grow from the small seed crystal to big wafer size. That takes time. Next who can supply you the pure water, the filters, the other consumables?

    Just rebuilding the Apollo "rocket to the moon" stuff would not be easy. Lots of the _unwritten_ knowledge has been lost - not everything is written down or can be. I won't be surprised if the records of what have been lost have been lost too :).

    "Rebooting" a high tech civilisation will take many years.

    We also have a very fragile civilization. With all the "Just-in-time" operations you can be ruined by one uncooperative volcano in Iceland. Just "interrupt the blood flow" for a while, and everything goes poof. Hopefully the leaders of the various nations know that so they don't get any stupid ideas and send us to stone age.

    --
  76. The iPhone will fail with no Flash!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I remember the headlines... and the general reaction here at the time. Didn't happen. :)

  77. I just bought a 50-pack yesterday for $7 by noidentity · · Score: 1

    It's funny, because I just bought a 50-pack yesterday for $7. I was worried I wouldn't be able to find them in town for a decent price. I was very surprised to have five different options: 25-pack for $4, 50-pack for $7, 100-pack for $13, 30-pack Maxell for $8, and 100-pack Sony for $20. This tells me that there is still some demand for them, though I guess it pales in comparison to the dozens and dozens of CD-R and DVD-R brands and variations available at the same store. I remember about 18 years ago when I was buying hundreds of floppies because they were the cheapest backup solution that didn't require investment in a tape drive. How times have changed. Now, get off my lawn.

  78. Turns out anyway by michaelmalak · · Score: 1
    I made a grievous error. I just remembered boxes of floppies in 1988 were $20 for 10, not $20 for 20. So even using the BLS numbers, that's $3.74, which is close to the $3.99 figure for a 512MB thumb drive.

    P.S. Thanks for the tip on scraping shadowstats.com!

  79. Re:"the end" "continues"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because there are two or three manufacturers of 3.5" floppy disks

    Yet, why? Possibly the best question this morning is who's buying new floppies in sufficient numbers to continue mass production? Floppy first got ejected (go ahead, scream) from personal computers in 1998 with the iMac. Even my old fully-loaded 'kitchen sink' 486 Thinkpad didn't have floppy built-in. CDRs got cheap/common in what, 2000? CDRW about the same time.

    You'd expect a fairly quick end to this technology once demand dropped. The benefit of mass production would cease, price would rise, and final demand would quickly extinguish. Yet apparently we still have a few fabs chugging along, putting them out cheap. What has caused the unexpected long tail?

  80. Re:"the end" "continues"? by NitroWolf · · Score: 1

    Because there are two or three manufacturers of 3.5" floppy disks - there aren't any more manufacturers entering the market, so it is a slow decline. You can still buy 3.25" disk drives as a option for a new PC (+$10) just in case.

    It's strange to think that back in the 1990's, we used to think 1.44 Megabytes of storage was extremely generous.

    No we didn't. I remember as early as 1988 thinking that 1.44 MB floppies did not have near enough storage since downloading some of the new games, like Space Ace, took up 6 floppies and it took forever at 2400 baud. I also remember thinking that I hoped I had enough floppies to store it that wern't bad... because at least 20% of the HD floppies in a box always turned out to have some defect.

    So no, 1.44MB floppies in the 90's were anything but "generous" when it came to storage.

  81. Win XP? by UnifiedTechs · · Score: 1

    The Floppy isn't going to die until WinXP is no longer the most installed OS in business environments, and Server 2003 is no longer used.

    It is still the only supported method to inject drivers into the install process, and many SATA and RAID controllers do not have native drivers on the CD because the OS is so old.

    Once XP & 2003 is gone the floppy will go with it.

    1. Re:Win XP? by LinuxIsGarbage · · Score: 1

      The "unsupported" method of integrating using nLite or similar would certainly be a lot more reliable and worth any perceived "risk" as compared to trying to get a functioning floppy.

      You could also just build an image and sysprep with drivers for all hardware you have and deploy to all the machines. A lot quicker than going machine to machine manually loading drivers.

      There's workarounds for XP/SATA, it's other things that are keeping floppies around, like legacy CNC machines that have no other method of transporting data.

    2. Re:Win XP? by UnifiedTechs · · Score: 1

      You must work in a big corporation, small businesses often don't have common hardware, so imaging and sysprep for each individual PC is not going to be faster then using a floppy.

  82. Re:"the end" "continues"? by NitroWolf · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Thankfully most of the motherboards I've purchased in the past few years allow me to load BIOS updates from USB storage. I think that was one of the last major uses for a floppy.

    But shocklingly, I've purchased a couple motherboards in the past 6 months that still require a floppy. I was like WTF and had to dig around in a box for a floppy drive. Who the hell still requires a floppy in this day and age? I don't recall what manufacturer it was but I can tell you I'll not be buying another motherboard that requires a floppy to update the BIOS. Thankfully I had a spare box of HD floppies in my drawer, but come on... really? 2010, brand new MB and I had to find a floppy?

  83. Re:"the end" "continues"? by DesScorp · · Score: 1

    You joke, but lots of people still use them. In my son's high school, a class he's taking requires them. The teacher makes her students save everything on a floppy. Objections about safety of the data are ignored, so its rather ridiculous, but I've instructed my son to use two floppies... one as a backup... in case all his work dies on the primary. And yes, it's a public school.

    --
    Life is hard, and the world is cruel
  84. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you are one of those people that feel the need to hang on to 20 - 25 year old systems, not by requirement but out of novelty, then you have to accept at some point it just becomes obsolete, period. You might be able to rig something up for a few more years of use, but you eventually have to accept the fact you can't use your old NES or Amiga or whatever. Them's the breaks.

    If you require the use of 25 year old tech for business purposes, then you are definetly not staying innovative and most likely will find it hard to compete in the market from companies that invest in new technology and innovation. If you can't realize you need to constantly re-invest in technology to stay current to avoid situations like this then you are not making valid buisness decisions and don't deserve to stay in business. In most cases, legacy = cheap and companies can't always rely on the cheapest options to stay in business.

    If you still want to play NES-era video games there are many other modern alternatives. The Wii, for instance, offers extensive support of all legacy games made by Nintendo and other competitive systems. If you don't want to pay for old games then there are a slew of NES emulators available for almost any device with a screen and some form of input (including touch screen cell phones). I have also seen $20 products sold at a mall kiosks that have 100 NES and Sega games built into a controller. There is still a demand to play old NES era games, and the industry has designed solutions to allow you to play those games, its just the original hardware that is obsolete.

    In the computer industry, its all digital, and digital survies the era's. While floppies have become obsolete the data stored typically is not. People who are in a position where they cannot move forward using floppy disks should back up all their data and move towards modern storage devices like USB flash drives, or network storage devices. Moving forward it will be a lot less important about what "mechanical" device hold on to data, but more about how easy it is to transfer to new technology when the old technology reaches end of life.

    I just don't feel concern for people wanting to use 20 year old digital technology. Unlike the car industry which is actually a collectors market, I don't see any compelling reason to hold on to slower, bigger, crappier technology particularily when I can still access the digital content on newer technology. When I can wirelessly download a NES game for $2 for a few hours of nostalgic game play, that is good enough for most people. Spending hours or days trying to rig up an old NES system to work is just not worth it. If I need a part for an old car, I can most likely machine it. But when my C64 kicks the bucket or I cannot use it because I don't have the right cables or display, so be it.

    BTW, my 4 year old nephew still uses my NES system and the reason is that I thought the RF adapter option was crappy and obsolete back in 1985 so I bought the RCA connection cable. I can still use the NES on any modern Flat Panel TV. Sometimes its just about wisely investing in technology in the first place which makes it last through the generations, its not always about getting the cheapest or default options and hoping it lasts.

  85. firmware updates :( by dAzED1 · · Score: 1

    I bought a new gigabyte mobo about 18mo ago, and it has several issues I have had to just put up with - many of which are happily fixed by a firmware update. Only, it seems I need a 3.5" floppy drive to do that...and I haven't had one of those in at least 10 years.

    1. Re:firmware updates :( by EmagGeek · · Score: 1

      The GigaByte board I recently bought boots from CD or USB Flash to do a firmware update.

    2. Re:firmware updates :( by dAzED1 · · Score: 1

      yeah, it's unfortunate that cds and usb weren't invented yet 18 months ago.

      Seriously, I don't get why the farking hell gigabyte thought, so damn recently, most people would even have a floppy drive anymore.

    3. Re:firmware updates :( by EmagGeek · · Score: 1

      What model Gigabyte board do you have? I'd be willing to bet it'll boot from USB or CD.

  86. Re:"the end" "continues"? by sv_libertarian · · Score: 1

    Back in "the day", roughly 12-15 years ago, I kept a rescue disc in the form of either a DR DOS or MS DOS 6.22 boot disc with various discutils loaded on there. Plenty of room on a 1.44 floppy for that. Now I just use a Linux live CD, or whatever the Evil ones From Redmond offer... Now that bootable CD's have taken the place of the floppy, and USB flash media fills the roll for quick and useful data storate; floppies are just a quaint habit to most of the world.

  87. Cheap manufacturing killed the floppy. by GarryFre · · Score: 1

    I stopped using floppies not by choice but because the quality of floppy drives dropped so badly that putting anything on a floppy if you could even manage to format it was like accepting an IOU written on an ice cube. No this isn't all my opinion, I read in reputable journals about this sort of unreliability being caused by cheap parts in floppy drives. So in short, the poor old floppy didn't die of old age. It was murdered! Hehe.

    --
    www.Migrainesoft.com - Computer giving you a headache? We can fix that!
  88. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by hitmark · · Score: 1

    nuked to stone age is maybe a bit extreme example, as then just having clean drinking water can be enough of a issue, never mind rebuilding a phone system. But right now, even keeping a less the 50 year old device working is near impossible thanks to no info about some of its parts. Small batch IC are the ultimate technological black box, basically.

    found some old floppies on a back shelf somewhere, and want to see if there is something on them? good luck finding the exact computer that did the writing, with a drive that works. At the same time we can read books that are several 100 years old.

    --
    comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
  89. Re:"the end" "continues"? by Dekker3D · · Score: 1

    1s y0ur fl0ppy t00 sm4ll? call now! we have the cure, and it's not vi-... bleh. i need to go bleach my brain now.

  90. Re:"the end" "continues"? by Moby+Cock · · Score: 1

    We still use floppies where I work for staffing annual performance reports on the workers. The data is considered too sensitive for the network so everybody has a file folder with a hardcopy of the report and a floppy in a envelope inside made up for them. The supervisors pass them to the managers and onwards up to the boss. Hundreds of file folders with hundreds of floppies. Every year. There is no plan move away from the system as it is perceived to be highly functional. Although, I suspect one day it will move to USB drives. We already had to buy a shit load of USB 3.5" drives when the new laptops came in...

  91. Floppies by windcask · · Score: 1

    There's going to have to be at least one manufacturer kept alive. People need floppies for things like CMOS firmware upgrades and booting legacy systems.

  92. Re:"the end" "continues"? by TavisJohn · · Score: 1

    "we used to think 1.44 Megabytes of storage was extremely generous"

    Ummm in the 1990's I was using 100mb Zip Disks and cursing how small 1.44mb was. I also purchased one of the early 2x CD Burners available for over $600 for data archiving.

    I do have a couple of USB Floppy Drives for when I need to access something that I have archived on 3.5" disks. However I am going to start backing those up to CD/DVD soon for 2 reasons. Floppies will not last forever, and they take up lots of space.

  93. A:\ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But Windows 7 still asks for A:\ ! What will I do now?

  94. 'Tis but a scratch! It's not dead yet! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Imagine my surprise when my new PC, purchased a couple of months ago, came with a floppy disk containing a "Multimedia Driver" for its _keyboard_. (Of course, no floppy disk drive included.)

  95. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by drgruney · · Score: 1

    And there's always the option to take 3 halfway broken ones, and make 2 working ones out of those.

    That's some fuzzy math. .5x3=1.5 working machines.

  96. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by blackraven14250 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The "various nations" that would "have stupid ideas" and decide to "[nuke us] into the stone age" just so happen to already live in a weird spot where they're in the stone age but they have AK-47s.

  97. What about MoBo tattoos? by Excelcior · · Score: 1

    The two manufacturers I'm certified by (HP & Toshiba) refuse to let you tattoo most of their motherboard with anything but a floppy. I haven't the foggiest why, but such is the case. Because of that, I actually use them often enough to carry a USB floppy drive in my standard toolkit.

    --
    A small comparison of interest:
    Windows: Public School. Mac: Private School. Linux: Homeschool. Assembly: Unschool.
  98. Re:"the end" "continues"? by lintux · · Score: 1

    And now you're blind?

    (Aren't those disks still way too thin and transparent to be used for this?)

  99. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by mcrbids · · Score: 1

    i wonder if there should be some kind of public domain requirement for obsoleting stuff like that. Basically, when production is shut down, all specs and production processes are handed over to some archive in human readable form.

    There is. Or at least, there is supposed to be. And strangely, around these parts, most everybody cries out against it and would rather it disappeared.

    It's called a 'patent'. Of course, there are some limitations - the language around patents require a clear, exact description of the invention, and somehow, source code doesn't fall under these constraints, even if most patents nowadays are software patents.

    But the idea of what you are looking for *exactly* matches the point of patent!

    --
    I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
  100. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by karnal · · Score: 1

    Except for that one part that is in the rear end that you just must have :)

    --
    Karnal
  101. Re:"the end" "continues"? by Truekaiser · · Score: 2, Insightful

    updating the bios of your motherboard from a floppy is still one of the more fool proof methods of doing it. it's so easy for other programs to fsck up flashing the bios in windows, i have had to fix allot of computers after that. linux also is not a supported os on such motherboards so your stuck with what ever bios the motherboard(including laptops) ship with. you can't even make a cd to flash the bios with one of those winflash programs in such circumstances.

  102. Last time I used a floppy disk... by toygeek · · Score: 1

    Was about 5 or 6 years ago. I put it in the floppy drive of a horribly annoying coworker and made sure it was set to boot from the 3.5" first. I was getting payback for some crap he had pulled on me. After an hour of him cussing and not being able to figure out why his computer wouldn't boot, I walked up, ejected the disk, and walked away. Damn, that was satisfying.

    Revenge is a dish best served cold, and with a side of twisted satisfaction.

  103. Buh, buh, but... How will we copy that floppy? by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 1

    This will end piracy!

  104. Floppies still in banking by another+joe · · Score: 1

    I just had to order a ten pack of refurb floppies for a customer who maintains bank ATMs. None of my suppliers had new ones in stock and the USB floppies won't always work. Seems like a lot of small banks still use them.

  105. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    It's not like Doom beats the snot out of Halo ;)

    Someone hasn't played enough Doom....

  106. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by domatic · · Score: 1

    The AK-47 itself gets as close to stone age as it possibly can. It made mostly out of wood and stamped parts and has really loose tolerances and is as mechanically simple for a weapon of that class to be. Given good plans I bet the first gun foundries capable of producing interchangeable parts could turn them out. That is mid-1800s tech. The ammo would be trickier than the gun itself but late 1800s tech could manage the ammo.

  107. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Er... did you or he really think that wasn't the case? Parts cars are good for things like an engine to rebuild while you get the life out of the runner, or parts to act as patterns. You seldom get consumables that are any damn good unless the parts car was involved in a wreck.

    Anything that isn't popular enough to spawn third-party manufacturing is going to have a few hen's teeth components that are next to impossible to replace. Even something pedestrian like early 70s Ford pickups; the cab gets some rust and 'settles' on the frame, this puts a little more stress on a fibre joint in the steering column. And good luck finding those joints even ten years ago - that put quite a number of good cheap work trucks in the weeds as 'not worth it'.

  108. Re:"the end" "continues"? by suomynonAyletamitlU · · Score: 1

    You're being stupid.

    "The end" as a historical note, that is, looking back on it, is a point in time.

    When people see (or believe they see) that "the end" or something is coming, they generally want to comment on it before it happens, as opposed to just looking back sadly and seeing that it's already gone. They will, obviously, use "the end" to describe it, because that's what they are commenting on. If it isn't really quite over yet, for whatever reason, these stories can drag on over months, years, or in this case, decades.

    Your shallow use of grammar does not mean that the article title was at all unclear. Without seeing the summary, much less the arcticle, I knew from the title that there was another story about how 3.5" disks are still dying, had not fully disappeared, but that another milestone had come in its demise and/or that someone had just made some sort of commentary on it, something of that sort.

  109. Backup by willsmith82 · · Score: 1

    Aww man, how am I supposed to make a backup copy of the internet now...

  110. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by hitmark · · Score: 1

    problem is, patents do not cover everything. Heck, a large number of the IC used in early stuff is probably not under patent in any way, or if patented, only parts of them are. For the most part they are probably undocumented, or if they are documented, the documents are sitting in some corp archive somewhere, long forgotten after multiple buyouts and mergers.

    and my issue with patents are not the basic idea, but how its being applied the same for everything even tho different areas have different speeds of innovation. IMO, in the time period a physical process can be developed and made use of, multiple computer processes can be developed, used and made obsolete. Therefor the period of time that may work for a physical process, will be overkill for a computing related patent.

    --
    comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
  111. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by TheLink · · Score: 2, Interesting

    To create large numbers of those bullets requires a factory or two, a fair bit of infrastructure - and the gunpowder and metal become consumables.

    In contrast, the humble machete was involved in killing millions in Africa. Reloading is pretty simple with the machete ;). They're also using bow and arrows in some of their wars too (judging from some recent pics).

    Don't get me wrong, a gun would still be useful to have, but better be pretty selective on your targets.

    --
  112. Re:"the end" "continues"? by jedidiah · · Score: 1

    A problem with a phrase like "in the 90's" is that it includes 1991 as well as 1999.

    By 1999, I wanted mobile storage media in the Gigabyte range. Nevermind a mere Meg.

    In 1991, I wasn't quite that greedy yet but still was interested in a better alternative to having hundreds of floppies in little filing cabinets.

    Anyone could see that Floppies were doomed as soon as mass storage caught up. This was obvious even in 91.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  113. Re:"the end" "continues"? by Jurily · · Score: 2, Funny

    The data is considered too sensitive for the network so everybody has a file folder with a hardcopy of the report and a floppy in a envelope inside made up for them.

    A rare example where disgruntled employees don't bring guns to announce they quit. They bring magnets.

  114. Re:"the end" "continues"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But shocklingly

    a couple motherboards

    I was like WTF

    You write like an idiot.

  115. Re:"the end" "continues"? by mog007 · · Score: 1

    Use a thumb drive. Whenever I flash my BIOS, that's usually the best option.

  116. Re:"the end" "continues"? by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

    updating the bios of your motherboard from a floppy is still one of the more fool proof methods of doing it.

    Not even close. To upgrade my newish Gigabyte motherboard, I put a BIOS image file on a FAT-formatted USB flash drive, reboot, and hit a certain key. It pops up a list of devices to browse and I select the flash drive, then it pops up a list of BIOS images on that drive and I select the one I want. Then it copies that image into whichever of the two flash locations on the motherboard that it didn't boot from and reboots. If the new BIOS works, great. If not, then it reboots back into the known-working BIOS.

    You can keep your floppy-based system, thanks. :-)

    --
    Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  117. I was just looking for one today! by herojig · · Score: 1

    I was trying to fix a Celsius 440 workstation for a pal today who only makes a few hundred dollars a month walking dogs. He needs something to play DVDs on, so I was trying to get the DVD player to play smoothly on a P3 with 128MB and an old SIS AGP with 4MB. Pretty sure it needs a bios update but can't find a floppy to do it. I had to tell him it's a no go without a floppy, so I he's going out for a walk to try and find one. I don't have the heart to tell him that I think the floppy in the beast is dead...at least it's not making that all too familiar but not missed horrible groaning noise on boot. I used Mubi to put Ubuntu on his XP dinosaur, and that helped just a tad. Didn't DVDs play smoothly back in the P3 days?

    --
    I think therefore I can't be ~TTNH
    1. Re:I was just looking for one today! by LinuxIsGarbage · · Score: 1

      DVDs play fine on my P3 with an i815 graphics. Also play fine on an old ATI 8MB card.

    2. Re:I was just looking for one today! by mirix · · Score: 1

      Could try Flashrom. Assuming you have a cd for boot to linux.

      I've never met a PII/III era board that it couldn't flash, but it's possible there are some out there. Pretty handy tool.

      --
      Sent from my PDP-11
    3. Re:I was just looking for one today! by herojig · · Score: 1

      very cool, thx for that link...will try it out soon...

      --
      I think therefore I can't be ~TTNH
    4. Re:I was just looking for one today! by herojig · · Score: 1

      i finally got it to work, just barely on a P3 i820...i think the AGP 4mb is the problem, but turning off hardware acceleration in VLC player makes the play acceptable for my pal who has nothing as it is. I tried installing Ubuntu but what a nightmare there just to get a DVD player to work at all...

      --
      I think therefore I can't be ~TTNH
  118. Behind in technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I still have a box of 8 inch floppy disk in shrink wrap.

  119. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You mean like how patents are supposed to work?

    Good luck with that.

  120. At least 3.5 inch drives were made on USB as well by damn_registrars · · Score: 1

    I still haven't found an external drive for reading my old 5.25" floppies.

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
  121. Re:"the end" "continues"? by mwvdlee · · Score: 1

    Are you sure you couldn't boot from a 100MB Zip-drive as well? :P

    --
    Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
  122. What do we put now into the "save" icon? by Kocureq · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Have you thought about this? Every program out there uses floppy image as the "save" button, but most of the teenagers right now never saw a real floppy disk. We need to replace it with something.

    1. Re:What do we put now into the "save" icon? by meatmanek · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Going back in a song or video is still called "rewinding", despite the fact that nothing we use for these media actually winds/unwinds/rewinds anymore.
      Multiple songs on a CD are still called "tracks", despite the fact that they aren't on separate tracks as they were on vinyl.
      We still "dial" a phone.

      Technology changes the way people think and how they describe things. The action (rewinding) starts to symbolize the intent (going backwards in a song), and after a while, the intent becomes the actual meaning of the word.

    2. Re:What do we put now into the "save" icon? by klui · · Score: 1

      Not separate tracks on vinyl either.

  123. Aborted BIOS update Non-Intel MB - Need Floppy by ClownPenis · · Score: 1

    I needed a floppy on Friday. I actually have a box of them, but I didn't have a drive anymore.
    Long story short I was updating the BIOS on an old Shuttle XPC
    (Last ditch effort to get it to run reliably before throwing it out the window).
    After a failed flash, the machine was effectively "bricked" until such a time I could get an actual floppy drive installed to to a recovery boot.
    It seems the only way for this old hardware to recover from a botched BIOS update was to boot from a real floppy.
    I tried countless USB sticks formatted as floppies and even an actual USB floppy drive all to no avail.
    The Shuttle XPC in question is now in the dumpster.

  124. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    It's called a 'patent'. Of course, there are some limitations - the language around patents require a clear, exact description of the invention, and somehow, source code doesn't fall under these constraints, even if most patents nowadays are software patents.

    If the requirements for a patent included that the patent application provide a complete set of rules for actually implementing the patent, then they'd be much more useful.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  125. Contrary to popular belief Windows is not all. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and computers based on the Intel architecture are not the be all and end all of computing.

    In the last ten years, the mainframe business has been rejuvenated to the point where a major FORTUNE 500 company is mostly sustained by mainfrmae sales (IBM). Contrary to the opinion of the "anything that can't be done in VB/Mono/SQLServer isn't worth doing crowd " mainframes will be around for a long,long, long time.

  126. Re:"the end" "continues"? by mlts · · Score: 1

    All motherboards I've used in the past decade support bootable CDs in the El Torito format, where the CD boots a floppy image, then goes from there. Newer motherboards can boot from a USB flash drive. These days, there just isn't the need for a 3.5" drive at all. Other technologies, primarily the USB flash drive have completely superseded it.

    It is funny, how long the 3.5" floppy format has lasted. Iomega's ZIP drive got wide use, but it didn't kill the floppy drive. SyQuest removable hard disks were common, but didn't. 300 megabyte MO drives that originally shipped instead of hard disks with the NeXT didn't replace it. The only technology that finally completely superseded the 3.5" drive on college campuses is the USB flash drive because it has no moving parts, better reliability in general, a small physical form factor, the fact that virtually every single PC has a USB port, and that virtually all PC operating systems are able to deal with them.

    The last time I used a 3.5" drive on one of my own machines was to get a Windows XP machine its RAID drivers during the OS install, and since Windows Vista, even that isn't needed because Vista will happily slurp the drivers from a USB flash drive.

    Ironically the last time I used a 3.5" drive was yesterday because a friend had a client who still sends documents out on them, even though a USB flash drive is likely cheaper and far more reliable.

  127. Re:"the end" "continues"? by TavisJohn · · Score: 1

    True, however I was reffering to 91, 92... The early 90's. That is when I got a Zip drive, the mid 90's is when I got a CD Burner.

  128. Well God help you if .... by bizitch · · Score: 1

    You're in a jam trying to reinstall Windows 2k03 or XP on some old hardware that needs some crazy special driver using the F6 floppy option

    --
    ---- "Logoff! That cookie shit makes me nervous!" - A. Soprano
    1. Re:Well God help you if .... by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

      Why in God's name would you reinstall anything that old?

      If you simply must have something that old and outdated (ie which doesn't have drivers available on newer hardware) then put it in a virtual machine. Problem solved, and no driver headaches.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
  129. Re:"the end" "continues"? by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

    Actually if your motherboard has one of those "winflash" programs you can build a live XP CD in about 20 minutes, boot into that so you don't have to worry about external programs boning the install, and be good to go. The nice thing about the XP Live CD is you can take a little time and update your tools to make a new rescue CD while you are at it. Really easy and less of a PITA than digging out a floppy drive (if you even have one, I tossed mine years ago).

    --
    ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
  130. Ahh memories by Daimanta · · Score: 1

    I currently volunteer at a student based non-profit shop that mostly sells computers and computer parts. 21 years ago, we started as a shop selling pretty nothing but old 5.25" floppies and we made tons of money doing it. We even had a rivalry with another non-profit shop who could sell the things at the lowest price so we had volunteers doing 400km drives just to get floppies at a lower price than the competition.

    At the moment, parts are crazy-ass cheap and webshops drive down the margin to nearly zero. Making money was a lot easier back then and PCs costed small fortunes $2000 was normal.

    Nowadays, we still have some tangible memories left: some old 5.25" floppies and a copy of MS-DOS 4.0 still in the original box.

    We also have an unsold copy of Windows Vista. We decided to add that one to the collection too.

    --
    Knowledge is power. Knowledge shared is power lost.
  131. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by poopdeville · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If you require the use of 25 year old tech for business purposes, then you are definetly not staying innovative and most likely will find it hard to compete in the market from companies that invest in new technology and innovation.

    Says who? The reason 25 year old systems stay in place is because they work, a lot of work has been done with them. What is the point of switching to Microsoft's latest version of Sharepoint if your purpose built business software (which you counted as a capitalizable cost) does everything you need it to? If it is easy to expand? If you use it to innovate? IBM makes a lot of money catering to these sorts of shops. IBM IS this sort of shop.

    --
    After all, I am strangely colored.
  132. Re:"the end" "continues"? by mikael · · Score: 1

    Seeing VGA graphics on an 80286 with a 3.5" drive and a demo disk with quantitized 256 color photographs was impressive way back in 1988. By 1991, just about everyone was cursing because it would take one or more boxes of disks to back up a PC using "Fastback".

    This is from a UK perspective - anything priced in dollars would be converted into pounds, even when the exchange rate was £1 = $2

    --
    Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
  133. floppys did try to keep up. by luther349 · · Score: 0

    floppy makers did try to upgrade them to keep up with new advances. like the 128mb super floppy drive. and even zip drives had a short run. but when cdr came out they just couldn't compete with a more reliable media. now where up to bdr that hold pretty much the same as a hard disk per disk. floppys still had there place in the office and school but with wifi becomeing common and sd cards being smaller and holding alot more media and lasting longer floppy's lost all there usefulness.

  134. Re:"the end" "continues"? by LinuxIsGarbage · · Score: 1

    Good riddance I say. While there may be other "cool" old technologies to be nostalgic about, my life would be complete if I never have to use a floppy every again. I rather use cassette tape storage. I have never seen such an unreliable technology in my life. I shutter to think of all the important lost documents whose sole copy was on a floppy. And so slow. The computer practically comes to a stop reading the floppy.

    The last time I used a floppy was to kickstart a Windows 98 install on an old laptop that can't boot from CD. It took 6 tries to get a functioning floppy. Next time I'll pull the drive and put it in an IDE/USB adapter. When I fire up old 8088 machines, I rather transfer data back and forth with a LPT crossover cable. Much faster and more reliable.

    For industries with legacy equipment that requires floppies, I'm surprised there aren't devices that plug into the floppy bus, and allow you to plug in a USB flash (or SD card) and mount a disk image. It would be more reliable and less painful than sourcing floppies and USB floppy drives. Then on the PCs you can mount the image file directly.

  135. Re:"the end" "continues"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One note about the capacity of 1.44" disks in the 1990s: Early part of the decade, programs like Dantz's DiskFit and Retrospect were usable and allowed people to back up their hard disk to herds of floppies, but in reality, in the early 1990s, the dream storage for most geeks would be a SyQuest drive, or a tape drive. (This was before the days of CD-R and CD-RW drives.) At this time, 386BSD came on 10 floppies (one compressed boot, 9 bin, and 20 source), and Linux distributions were of similar size. Before CD-ROM drives became popular (they pretty much were a part of all PCs in 1995), it took a while switching floppies in a machine to get an OS installed.

    In the late 90s, floppies were used for students to save work on, or as backups of other small files. People used to burn to CD if they had it, but at the time, most CD-ROM burners required a SCSI card. The mainstay in colleges were the ZIP drive because ZIP disks were relatively cheap, secure (there were no widespread ways to get past the password protection), and fairly standard almost everywhere.

  136. Re:"the end" "continues"? by WCguru42 · · Score: 1

    Their extremal points (i.e. the set of limits of those series) form a Cantor set in time,

    In case readers aren't into higher level mathematical theory, this is a Cantor Set. For all you CS people out there, it's every zero and two pattern in ternary (base 3) less than the value one.

    --
    "Educate the mind but never at the expense of the soul."~Blessed Basil Moreau
  137. Less-important Log files by u64 · · Score: 1

    To avoid Windows from waking up hard-drive from standby over and over i
    have all EventLogs on A:
    (i love the retro sound of floppy still doing useful work)
    Yes, these logs will eventually be lost.
    I wrote a small bat file that formats and then tests for bad blocks by
    filling half the disk with files. And then fill it completly, removing the
    first files to finally test the other half.
    My server running NAT DNS-server File-server DC++ Folding uptime is a
    year soon, no floppy-problems.

    FloppyFormat+Test.bat :0
    echo n| format a: /f:1.44 /a:2048 /V:A
    @dir a:\>nul
    fsutil file createnew a:\0 1396736 >nul
    chkdsk a: /f /r
    @del a:\0 >nul
    @dir a:\>nul
    fsutil file createnew a:\z 1396736 >nul
    for /L %%j in (1,1,32) do fsutil file createnew a:\%%j 2048 >nul
    del a:\z
    chkdsk a: /f /r
    @del/q a:\*
    @echo.
    @echo PRESS ANY KEY TO RUN FORMAT+CHKDSK AGAIN. Press Ctrl-c to Exit.
    @pause>nul
    goto 0

  138. Just one company... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There will still be Teac and NEC, assuming they don't both purchase parts from Sony in their construction. From NEC's support site, the FD-1231H, FD-1238H, and UF-0002 are not EOL'd, and Teac sells 5 different drives. Although Sony is discontinuing their line, I expect the FDD to survive another 2 decades, or at least until there is a FDD controller to MMC adapter.

  139. Re:"the end" "continues"? by jps25 · · Score: 1

    I've made two of those pencil holders.
    They're pretty awesome.

  140. Re:"the end" "continues"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    um, does that make any sense, or should i just move on?

  141. Lack of sales? by Eggbloke · · Score: 1

    Floppy disks are so reliable that the kind of people who still use them are using ones they bought ages ago, I have never had one fail.

    They are great for installing drivers during windows installation. It will be sad when they are gone.

    --
    I care not for your karma and your mod points.
  142. Re:"the end" "continues"? by jps25 · · Score: 1

    I have a MSI board which requires a floppy with DOS on it. Unfortunately I don't have a functioning floppy drive (I have an internal usb card-reader/floppy combo, but only the card-reader works).
    In order to flash the BIOS though all that's needed is a CD with FreeDOS and a usb-stick with the new BIOS.

  143. The Floppy Disk will certainly outlive us by UBfusion · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Some of many more reasons:

    1. There's a large industrial and scientific base using floppies because they rely on non-upgradeable DOS, Win 3.x, Win9x and WinXP proprietary/custom software and custom hardware combination. Many of them still use ISA bus motherboards and this is why there is a thriving market for ISA bus equipped so-called "industrial" motherboards.

    2. USB sticks are so small they are easily lost, misplaced and mixed up with your colleagues'/coworkers' identical ones.

    3. USB sticks are so small that one cannot adequately label them. Therefore it's hard to base a comprehensive versioning, roll-back or complete backup strategy (e.g. rotating grandfather-father-son strategies) on USB sticks.

    4. Most current USB sticks don't have a write-protect switch and thus are an easy target for viruses, trojans and rootkits when inserted in a random PC. Many of my colleagues' and students' sticks get infected when they go to service bureaus or their friends to print decent color copies of their work. In turn these sticks infect their own desktops, laptops, even their colleagues' PCs, in case these are inadequately protected.

    5. As a previous commenter said, USB sticks are not give-away friendly. Last January I searched the whole local market for 32/64/128 MB and cheap (under say 2-3 euros) USB sticks in order to provide my 16 students (which still didn't have email accounts) some Excel templates and teaching notes. In addition, the students would use the same stick during the semester to collect the experimental data from their labwork. The cheapest stick I could find was 7 euros, requiring a total budget of 112, which I can't afford. Giving away CDs (700 MB) for 1 MB of data for me is a perversion and an overkill, and since the lab PCs are not equipped with CD-R drives I cannot reuse them for multisession writing either.

    I could go on and on an on. Just think: Have you ever seen any new desktop motherboard, from any manufacturer, not featuring a floppy connector? What does this fact tell you?

    I concur to the already mentioned opinion that the Floppy-to-USB converter market will soon thrive.

    1. Re:The Floppy Disk will certainly outlive us by Reziac · · Score: 1

      "I concur to the already mentioned opinion that the Floppy-to-USB converter market will soon thrive."

      I'd agree, except that the cheapest price I found for this clearly simple gadget was $244 (185 euros). EACH. Ten bucks would be a tidy profit; this is beyond gouging, but the industrial market needs what it needs NOW and will pay, so...

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    2. Re:The Floppy Disk will certainly outlive us by UBfusion · · Score: 1

      Better search for "external floppy", e.g. Sabrent 1.44MB External USB 2X Floppy Disk Drive $19.99 on Tigerdirect:

      http://www.tigerdirect.com/applications/SearchTools/item-details.asp?EdpNo=1489134&CatId=287

    3. Re:The Floppy Disk will certainly outlive us by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but that's an actual floppy drive, priced more or less in line with normal floppy drives. This is a floppy port to USB port convertor that you can plug a flash drive into. Tho unless you buy an extra gadget they also sell, you're limited to 1.44mb per directory!!

      Not very damned cost-effective unless your work environment nukes floppy disks/drives too often.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  144. What is a 'floppy'? by w0mprat · · Score: 1

    So does a 3.5 inch floppy become a 5.25 inch hard drive?

    --
    After logging in slashdot still does not take you back to the page you were on. It's been that way for 20 years.
  145. That reminds me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I need to get around to transferring my floppy disks to some fresher medium while I still have access to a drive.

    Oh wait...look at all that dust in there.

    Where are my disks anyway?

  146. Re:"the end" "continues"? by iamhassi · · Score: 1

    "The last time I used a floppy disk... was in 1999"

    I recently had to use a floppy to replace the BIOS on a video card in XP.

    --
    my karma will be here long after I'm gone
  147. Phasing out old tech isn't always good. by mhajicek · · Score: 1

    There may be much better technologies out there, but backward compatibility has significant value. Say you have a multimillion dollar manufacturing machine, like a large five-axis gantry mill, that takes programs on 3.5" floppies or by RS-232 port. There was a time you could buy a cheap off-the-shelf desktop or laptop to interface with it. Now if you want something with a 3.5" floppy drive or an RS-232 port you need special hardware, often scavenged from antiques. Soon you'll have to spend a bunch of money to replace the control on the machine, not because it can't do it's job, but because you can't talk to it anymore.

  148. Same situation with WWII aircraft by Traf-O-Data-Hater · · Score: 1

    As with your locomotive example, WWII planes are at a technology level that can be rebuilt by dedicated enthusasists whereas post-war jet aircraft not so much. Reuilding a jet engine is so much more specialised.

  149. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by N1EY · · Score: 1

    Not quite true. The Flying Yankee had been the victim of good intentions and little planning for a long time. There was no museum for it, when they were trying to save it. You have to buy land and build!!! The Yankee was loaded with asbestos. It has issues to do with the lack of money. I saw it while it sat near a road in the middle of nowhere during one of the many phases of inertia in the restoration process. I think that it sat for at least a 10 year span with nothing concrete occuring. Steam railroading also requires logistical management which is very hard for museums to muster. The age of steam in the museums is coming to an end as many outfits including for-profit large scale tourism operators retire the units due to a lack of machining capability.

  150. Re:"the end" "continues"? by BikeHelmet · · Score: 1

    You can use floppy emulation on CD. I have one DVD that I use to flash BIOS's for plenty of different motherboards. Interestingly, it seems to get around the floppy size limit, too. I've got well over 6MB of stuff on that one DVD.

    http://www.hiren.info/pages/bootablecd

    Most slashdot readers would be able to decipher these instructions. This is the easiest method I've found - and because it generates the iso, you can burn it with a free tool like ImgBurn.

  151. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I read an article about you!

  152. Please change to disk labeled "rootkit". by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Easy just make a program that throws a dialog asking for a disk labeled rootkit :) Just like the old Adventure Games asking for the disk number N...

  153. Floppy's Relevance? by Selpher · · Score: 1

    So when did PC manufacturers stop actually making floppy drives? How late were Dell or HP or anyone else encouraging the use of Floppies for? The latest I can remember is around 2005ish, but that's not concrete.

  154. Floppy emulation. by w0mprat · · Score: 1

    Asus had a USB thumb drive that was also a USB floppy drive, 1.44mb of flash was reserved for a floppy image you could load.

    --
    After logging in slashdot still does not take you back to the page you were on. It's been that way for 20 years.
    1. Re:Floppy emulation. by kenh · · Score: 1
      --
      Ken
  155. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by drolli · · Score: 1

    i mention it when its on-topic. That was to illustrate the absurdity of designing an rf modulator instead of simulating the picture of an analog tv on a monitor.

  156. Re:"the end" "continues"? by Bourdain · · Score: 1

    Do you work for a nonprofit or accounting firm by any chance? :)

  157. Floppys in the theater by Spety · · Score: 1

    I use floppy's quite frequently, because the generation of lighting control desks before the current one all used them for storage.

  158. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by thegarbz · · Score: 1

    Just rebuilding the Apollo "rocket to the moon" stuff would not be easy. Lots of the _unwritten_ knowledge has been lost - not everything is written down or can be

    Now here are some scary words. Unfortunately I see this in my day to day work as an engineer in electrical maintenance. Even replacing failed equipment like for like often does not guarantee that things work. The design documentation and code are all well and fine, and quite possibly have excellent documentation, however when the equipment operator notices that something isn't working and fixes it by twisting a few wires together where does this knowledge get documented?

    Even in our own lives we can come across minor issues like this. I won't be telling a perspective buyer that you need to turn the kitchen top knob counter clockwise, press down, and only then select your temperature because there's a plastic bit broken inside.

    I work at a company where this kind of thing is so endemic that when a few select people retire the engineering department will be set back 10 years.

  159. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by networkBoy · · Score: 1

    3D printers are starting to change that (at least for the gears and such).

    --
    whois gawk date unzip strip find touch finger mount join nice man top fsck grep eject more yes exit umount sleep dump
  160. Re:"the end" "continues"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you can also dd the floppy image to a usb key, sd-card, hard drive, whatever. just use:
    dd if=/path/to/img of=/path/to/device
    it must be the DEVICE not a partition, ie sda not sda1 this abviasly overwrites the partition table on the device, but it will be seen as a floppy / boot like a floppy.

  161. Re:"the end" "continues"? by Nimey · · Score: 1

    I'd be a lot more foolproof for the BIOS-update program to create a bootable USB stick and tell you how to set your system to boot off that.

    I wouldn't trust any of my machines to the shite floppies that are made these days. You're apt to get a bad sector while it's in the middle of flashing.

    --
    Hail Eris, full of mischief...

    E pluribus sanguinem
  162. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by mirix · · Score: 1

    Good point. While the early electronic switching systems are entirely gone (afaik), some places still run good old crossbar switches (electromechanical, ie. all relays, solenoids, and switches).

    I remember reading something about the old bell electromechanical switches being designed for 40 minutes of downtime in 40 years. Sure the electronic systems are much smaller and more efficient, but something has to be said of the stink and warmth wafting off a rack of relays, and the "just works" part. Not to mention the clickety-clickety-clack factor.

    --
    Sent from my PDP-11
  163. Why is it called floppy? by antdude · · Score: 1

    Floppies are like those 5.25" and 8.5" flexible disks. Why are 3.5" considered floppies?

    --
    Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
    1. Re:Why is it called floppy? by RoboRay · · Score: 2, Informative

      The disk material is (relative to a hard disk platter) still soft and pliable. Putting a floppy disk inside a rigid enclosure doesn't mean the disk itself isn't floppy anymore.

    2. Re:Why is it called floppy? by antdude · · Score: 1

      Ahhh, I forgot about the flexible internal. Man, it has been awhile! Thanks. :)

      --
      Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
  164. Re:"the end" "continues"? by BikeHelmet · · Score: 1

    Handy, if you use Linux.

  165. File-manager-based burning still has drawback by tepples · · Score: 1

    So the operating system loopback mounts an ISO or UDF file system when I put in a blank CD-R. But just because it looks and sort of acts like a file manager on a floppy doesn't mean the end user can treat it like a floppy. For example, CD burners have a multi-minute delay between unmounting the file system and actually ejecting the disc. Floppies and USB flash drives don't have this delay.

    1. Re:File-manager-based burning still has drawback by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      Whatever. I'm not going to tear into your retarded floppy nostalgia, because it's obviously based solely on nostalgia and thus resistant to logical attacks.

      Just use a cheap flash drive or email the fucking file like the rest of the planet does.

  166. End of the 3.5-inch Floppy Continues on Sunday Apr by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Until companies and the Government move totally away from Windows Server 2003 there will continue to be a need for floppy drives. WS03 will not accept media other than a floppy - even USB in emulation mode - to load third-party drivers during initial build. Given the numerous RAID controllers and their continual update, floppies will be needed to image or restore WS03 systems.

    Yes, drivers can be slip-streamed into an existing disc so the floppy with drivers is not needed, however, not all techs or admins currently working in the market know what slip-streaming is let alone how to do it. In addition, numerous US Government organizations do not allow non-standard MS media due to security concerns, even if the disc is customized within their own environment.

  167. Re:"the end" "continues"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nu-uh.

  168. I still have to use them... by davidmarkscott · · Score: 1

    Just adding my two cents about the place of 3.5" disks in the current era of computing. I too thought that the format was dead, never to be seen again, but I was proven wrong this semester at uni. I'm doing a class called "Real Time Programming" which is exactly what you would expect from the title; programming with time demands, etc. We're controlling a model train system, basically so four trains can move around automatically, switch tracks, speed up, slow down, all without crashing. Our lecturer (also designer of the system) decided to ensure that all the students had to write efficient code, decided to use an old 486 as the computer controlling it all. And how do we get our code onto the 486? By floppy disk of course! Lucky I didn't throw out that old drive I had lying around :)

  169. How about 5.25" and 8" floppies? by Svartormr · · Score: 1

    I used them both.

  170. Floppies will always be better by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    with a floppy disk, you actually have something you can hold in your hand. you can't hold whatever "c:" is. plus, sharing is a breeze! i just give it to someone and it's shared! no need for fancy software or "internets" or any such nonsense. floppy disks are the vinyl records of computing: they will always be better!

  171. Re:"the end" "continues"? by MidnightBrewer · · Score: 1

    I never found floppies to be useful even when they were mainstream; they simply were too unreliable to store data on. I bought into Zip disks as soon as they were released and never looked back. Even that's nostalgic, thinking back to the day when 100MB per disk was generous! Man, I loved my Zip drive.

    So a mere decade-plus-a-bit after Apple announced that they would no longer be including a floppy drive on their computers, one company finally announces that they're no longer going to be producing them by next year? Talk about your technology lag.

    --
    "Give a man fire, and he'll be warm for a day; set a man on fire, and he'll be warm for the rest of his life
  172. Re:"the end" "continues"? by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

    The beginning of the end for floppy disks was when they were inexpensive - and started to come in more than just "grey" and "black" colors. I noticed they ceased being a reliable medium shortly after AOL started to ship them for free as installation media, which matches the time they started to be colorful.

    The last time I bought floppy disks, they were $1 each in packs of 10, with a $5 mail-in rebate. I threw out half of them after one or two uses due to bad sectors and unreliability.

    I found some floppies in a box of stuff at work last week. The box had a bunch of SCSI and floppy cables, mounting brackets, and various other "IT office" things. This box was covered in dust, as was everything in the box. It'd not been touched in years.

    In our office, I don't think there's a single floppy drive left to read these things, and if there were, it wouldn't matter: any useful purpose floppy disks once served has been supplanted by USB flash disks and bootable CDs. (There may even be a couple in systems still, but I doubt any has been used in 5+ years.) Hell, the systems unable to boot from USB are almost all gone in our customer sites by now, too.

    Ironically, the last time I used a floppy disk, it was an AOL disk, and it was still working. I ceased using the things when Debian ceased providing an installation image set on them.

    Realistically, the only use floppy disks (or rather, their drives) have is to recover potentially important data from older disks people haven't managed to move to other medium by now. But if it hasn't been done by now, chances are that media isn't all that important.

    --
    ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
  173. Re:"the end" "continues"? by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

    Seriously? We're talking about floppy drives here: they haven't been reliable medium for at least 5 years, but closer to 10. The last time I used them, I was only able to get 3 out of 10 I'd bought new to consistently (ie 1+ time) read + write data.

    What's wrong with using a USB flash drive as a BIOS upgrade medium?

    The last couple boards I bought don't even have a floppy connector (though the last one I bought -did- have serial headers... wow.)

    (And, finally.. what kind of person flashes a BIOS? I don't think I've done that but once or twice, and that was on craptastic Compaq or HP vendor boards that were almost featureless.)

    --
    ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
  174. Re:"the end" "continues"? by dangitman · · Score: 1

    It's strange to think that back in the 1990's, we used to think 1.44 Megabytes of storage was extremely generous.

    No, nobody thought that in the 1990s, unless they were idiots. Any savvy user recognized that it was a serious constraint.

    --
    ... and then they built the supercollider.
  175. Re:"the end" "continues"? by DerPflanz · · Score: 1

    Last time we used a floppy in this company, was last week. A 5 1/4 inch disk to boot a old CP/M S5 programmer (so old I can't even find a picture of it online) to help a client. Whose software was also on another 5 1/4" disk. Everything still worked, client was happy again.

    Good thing we keep these things in our museum,

    --
    -- The Internet is a too slow way of doing things, you'd never do without it.
  176. Re:"the end" "continues"? by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    Yes, but the beginning of the end, the beginning of the end of the end, the beginning of the end of the end of the end, etc. form a converging series. The point of convergence is the ultimate end point, where all ends ultimately end.

    But the beginning of (the end of)^n the end isn't quite the end of the end.

    Now I know why I never get anything finished.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  177. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by TheThiefMaster · · Score: 1

    This seems to be true with technology in general. Railway museums are a good example of this; the steam locomotives with their more-or-less blacksmith level technology have a better future as working exhibits than 1930s-era diesels.

    In fact, the technology still exists to make one from scratch. Sure, it took 14 years, but from what I understand that's mostly due to acquiring funds.

    I find this little snippet to be amusing as hell:

    On 21 December 2009, Tornado rescued about 100 people who were stranded by bad weather at London Victoria station. On that day, a number of electric trains, which picked up their power from the third rail, were unable to run because of snow and ice on the line. Tornado was to haul a 'Cathedrals Express' lunchtime special service from Victoria; a number of booked passengers had been unable to get there due to the conditions, and so there were spare seats; the train's operators decided to offer these seats to commuters whose trains had been cancelled. Tornado also had an evening 'Cathedrals Express' dining train, and the same offer was again made.

  178. In fact, it is alive, forseeable future by Ilgaz · · Score: 1

    What made 3.5 inch floppy that bad? It was mostly the format. The format when you get format a: , the FAT12.

    So, FAT12 "evolved" (!) to FAT16 and FAT32/EXFAT, staring at my Nokia E71's memory card and remembering I had to chkdsk E: /f /r just 2 days ago, I better remind you that horrible format is alive in devices which it was never designed for.

    When you notice clever programmers at Nokia etc. try to open more directories rather than putting all files to same dir because it is how that junk format works better, you remember it. Or, when a person loses all their personal pictures just because memory card moved from its place and doesn't have expertise to salvage that junk without getting robbed by greedy shareware (!) authors.

    What makes me mad is, we actually PAY for that junk, while buying the device/camera/phone. If I had a option, I would go with NTFS. So, because of journaling, it will work fine for a year or two? fsck it, it would be obsolete that time already. I don't buy the "journaling kills flash drive" either since there are tens of millions of flash drives formatted with HFS+ Journaled happily working for years. All the iPods/iPhones you see runs HFS+ Journaled and HFS+ has a bad habit of always writing B Tree to a fixed place.

    1. Re:In fact, it is alive, forseeable future by Bungie · · Score: 1

      I don't buy the "journaling kills flash drive" either since there are tens of millions of flash drives formatted with HFS+ Journaled happily working for years.

      The real flash drive killer in NTFS is the last accessed date stamp. The NTFS Change Journal is only updated when you make changes to the files on the disk. The last accessed date stamp is updated every time a file or folder is accessed for any purpose. This means that data is constantly being written to the MFT and the folder entry for a file every time it's handles are closed. The last accessed stamp can also only be It can only turned off globally via the system registry.

      Most of the time when you are using your MP3 player or phone it's not changing any of the files, so the change journal is not being written very much either. Bits of data that does change (like song play count or ratings) can be flushed at one time to keep flash writes low. That's why journalled HFS+ is not a big problem. NTFS would write data to the file system every time those files are opened, which is a lot of additional wear.

      --
      The clash of honour calls, to stand when others fall.
  179. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by Philip_the_physicist · · Score: 1

    I find this little snippet to be amusing as hell:

    On 21 December 2009, Tornado rescued about 100 people who were stranded by bad weather at London Victoria station. On that day, a number of electric trains, which picked up their power from the third rail, were unable to run because of snow and ice on the line. Tornado was to haul a 'Cathedrals Express' lunchtime special service from Victoria; a number of booked passengers had been unable to get there due to the conditions, and so there were spare seats; the train's operators decided to offer these seats to commuters whose trains had been cancelled. Tornado also had an evening 'Cathedrals Express' dining train, and the same offer was again made.

    There were quite a number of amusing stories of locomotive failure on British steam excursions, especially in the '90s, where the locomotive that failed was not the steam loco, but the diesel which was required by the operating authorities in case the steam loco broke down (and often to provide air braking and sometimes electric heating). I believe this has become less common now.

  180. Re:End of the 3.5-inch Floppy Continues on Sunday by kenh · · Score: 1

    USB Floppies work, if the server BIOS supports them - the installer leans on the BIOS for device access during the early steps in the install process, so the issue is the BIOS, not the software.

    I was assembling parts to build two "identical" machines for use in teaching myself about Windows Clusters under Hyper-V, and I paused when I saw $4.99 floppy drives at the retailer... I thought about it, but in the end, I choose not to because the chassis I am planning on using doesn't have an external 3 1/2" drive bay to hold the floppy drive.

    Yes, the MB has a floppy controller, though that is becoming less common these days as well.

    At work I keep a stash of new, unused, 3 1/2" floppies for use when there is no other option (we use a lot of older servers and desktops - older means 5-8 years old), and maybe twice a year it is just easier to use a floppy for some thing (like random BIOS update, server firmware update, etc.)... Typically there are other options, but sometimes the floppy drive option is easiest.

    --
    Ken
  181. Re:"the end" "continues"? by rhook · · Score: 1

    Now days you can update the BIOS from inside the OS.

  182. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by overlordofmu · · Score: 1

    To deal with the 10,000 years of dark age to follow the end of this Empire, I propose the creation of two repositories of all human knowledge at opposite ends of the galaxy. One on the resource starved planet of Terminus and the other at "Star's End".

    And unless we get some sort of mind control mutant that rises to power during this interim, this should solve the problem nicely. Now, where is my calculator?

  183. Re:"the end" "continues"? by Bungie · · Score: 1

    The main idea behind using a floppy for all those years is that it is a very simple interface for the BIOS to initialize and use. Even a BIOS with a bad flash can access the floppy easily enough to load a recovery image. Access to the CD-ROM or USB drives is done through more interfaces and requires more work for the BIOS to use them. You also might need to flash the code that deals with any one of those interfaces.

    It's just like the BIOS using a PCI video adapter for emergency recovery. Even though AGP or PCI express are more common, it's easier for the BIOS to get the PCI adapter going in an emergency situation.

    --
    The clash of honour calls, to stand when others fall.
  184. Re: by TheMikeyJ · · Score: 1

    The floppy will never die where I work! We have tried and tried in vain to replace them but the manufacturing floor refuses to use the shared network space we've setup and trained them on. We've also provided them with USB drives thinking that would simulate inserting a floppy into a drive. We just placed another order for 300 floppies because they die after about a month of use. :(

  185. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by jellomizer · · Score: 1

    These are situations that are not really a problem just a bad choice on your part...

    As technology goes out of date there is often a grace period where you can Upgrade/Convert your data... You shouldn't rationally expect to keep that system running in full production for ever there is a point where you need to upgrade.

    Now if you are a collector then yes you will need a store of replacement parts to keep it going. That is what classic car collectors do.

    So if you are in the situation that you need to replace a part for a product that you need to use. Then it is your/your companies own damn fault for not upgrading in a rather generous window that they have.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  186. Time to Hoard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I should probably buy a new box. I still own and use a Sony Mavica camera that saves to a 3.5" floppy disc.

    The lens is awesome, and while the camera only takes photos 680 pixels wide, they are crisp and clean. This camera is great for ebay and other situations where the object is stationary.

    I'll miss you 3.5 inch floppy.

  187. Most that I need of 3.5" are DSDD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    DSHD don't work too well with older 3.5" disk drives if they work at all, they usually end up w/RW errors before very long. Usually before the end of their first use session.

    Most of the machines that I have that CAN adequately read DSHD 3.5" also have CD-ROM drives, and CDs are cheaper anyways.

    I also have a bunch that can only use 5.25" drives w/o EXPENSIVE custom addons for emulating hdds through a physical mechanical hdd or some type of flash memory, however even then they usually appear as a crapload of floppy disks and still have limited total storage addressability but are mostly impractical due to the cost of the available controllers making 5.25" floppies MUCH cheaper in this case.

    My next concern would be ATA type hdds as most of my older machines only have controllers for IDE-ATA devices or older SCSI both of which are disappearing if not entirely gone already as well.

    (I'm hoarding old 3.5 DSDDs & 5.25" floppies, just wish that I'd saved more of those old AOL disks that they used to send out all of the time... as for quite a while they were DSDD 3.5s...)

  188. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by hitmark · · Score: 1

    or a whole bunch of people sitting around after dark, repacking used casings into new ammo.

    --
    comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
  189. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by hitmark · · Score: 1

    i think she is on a smoke break...

    --
    comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
  190. Re:"the end" "continues"? by tohoward · · Score: 1

    unless you have a case where the end of each beginning is already the beginning of the end.

    i.e. you are reading Robert Jordan's Wheel of Time series.

  191. Re:"the end" "continues"? by marty23571113 · · Score: 1

    The only reason I use on is to flash a bios. It does come in handy then thought of course there are other media just as good if nopt better. One could also foll with small linux'es that can be put on a floppy for kicks.

  192. FreeDOS by tepples · · Score: 1

    Not just your own, but every PC you might need to fix?

    PCs that can't boot from USB are in need of replacement even if only due to being slower than the slowest PC made even three years ago. At some point, you can just replace it with a small-form-factor PC and even the savings on the electricity bill will pay for the replacement.

    Including booting DOS 6.22 for flashing the BIOS?

    Why boot Microsoft DOS when you can boot FreeDOS?

  193. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by dublin · · Score: 1

    Just rebuilding the Apollo "rocket to the moon" stuff would not be easy. Lots of the _unwritten_ knowledge has been lost - not everything is written down or can be. I won't be surprised if the records of what have been lost have been lost too :).

    Tell me about it! True Story: I was just out of school and working my first job for a California aerospace company one morning in 1986 when the Challenger blew up. It wasn't two weeks before our entire group was in turmoil, because the Air Force had realized that the shuttle fleet was going to be grounded for years and they *had* to replace some critical spy sats in the not-too-distant future. Orders were issued to resurrect the Titan program and build some boosters to get by ASAP.

    Enter "forensic engineering" - we had the drawings in storage, but they had been chewed up pretty severely by mice - we were literally piecing them together with tweezers and tape in a scene out of NCIS, and guessing at what was on the areas that were flat missing.

    In one memorable instance (the tool for the carbon-carbon exhaust nozzle) we had tooling, but had no idea how to use it - the plies laid in on a spiral, so it was easy to get started, but we had no idea how we were supposed to wedge the last several dozen plies in place. The shop-floor documentation said what to do, but gave no clue as to how to do it! Whoever built it knew things we didn't - but most of the people who had worked on the program were retired, dead, or addled, so we were pretty much on our own. I left before the company figured it out - it's quite possible they had to build a new multipart tool - either that or they finally found an old-timer to clue them in, since the Titan flew on schedule not too much later...

    --
    "The future's good and the present is nothing to sneeze at." - Roblimo's last ./ post
  194. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by Stuntmonkey · · Score: 1

    Borrowed time perhaps, but then with old technology the number of interested people goes way down over time too.

    The best objective indicator of scarcity is market price. Is there an obsolete technology that is worth more today than it cost originally, in inflation-adjusted dollars? Obviously some cars and comic books are "collectible" in this way. Any technology examples? What would somebody pay for a mint condition Apple ][, or an original arcade game console (Space Invaders, Donkey Kong, etc.)?

    A case example would be the Curta mechanical calculator, which has become a hot collectors item due to its uniqueness and interesting history. They sold for $600 fifty years ago, and meanwhile inflation over this period has been around 7.5x. I don't believe these are worth $4,500 today, even in very good condition. Could there ever be a collectible technology, or does demand always fall off faster than the supply of working parts?

  195. Re:"the end" "continues"? by Nyder · · Score: 1

    True, however I was reffering to 91, 92... The early 90's. That is when I got a Zip drive, the mid 90's is when I got a CD Burner.

    This is the internet, next time type what you mean.

    --
    Be seeing you...
  196. Re:"the end" "continues"? by TavisJohn · · Score: 1

    Tell that to the guy who talked about "back in the 1990's, we used to think 1.44 Megabytes of storage was extremely generous".

  197. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You might be interested in Harry Turtledove's The Guns of the South, an alternate history book that explores that exact topic: AK-47 meets Civil War. And it includes looking at how such a gun might be reproduced with period knowledge and infrastructure.

    And if upon reading it you decide you like Turtledove's alternate history style, he's got a 10 book epic I thoroughly enjoyed that kicks off with the South trumping the North early in the war, and continues on all the way through a brutal alternate history World War I and II between the still-present South and North. The first in the series is How Few Remain, if it might interest you.

    He has a definite style though, so if you're not a fan after one book, you never will be.

  198. Save button graphic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wonder how long it will take for application UIs to dump the "floppy disc" graphic as a save button. I reckon kids today probably don't even know what the save button is meant to look like!

  199. In floppy I trust. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nothing like the sweet sounds of a floppy seek at daybreak to really put your life in perspective. ERrrrrrr .. click click.. Errr.

  200. Re:"the end" "continues"? by teslar · · Score: 1

    The last time I even saw a floppy disk was in 2001 in a computer lab at my University at that time. Actually, I didn't see a floppy disk itself, I saw a floppy disk vending machine, And I remember thinking "How quaint. Does anyone still use these? And want one badly enough to actually pay for it?"

    Semi-related... are rewritable CDs still around? Haven't seen one of those in ages either....

  201. Re:points to an increasing problem with modern tec by Reziac · · Score: 1

    And if Things Fall Apart, which locomotive would you rather have to hand??

    --
    ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  202. Re:"the end" "continues"? by Reziac · · Score: 1

    Now that's clever... gonna have to stop throwing out those dead floppies. :)

    --
    ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  203. It shall live on forever in emulation: disk images by D4C5CE · · Score: 1