Do I need a Floppy Drive at all?

eVaoVe

Senior member
Aug 31, 2004
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I have no real use for Floppys but do other items require a floppy? Does flashing your BIOS require a floppy or can I just use a CD?
 

nageov3t

Lifer
Feb 18, 2004
42,808
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they only cost a couple dollars. unless you want to put something else in the 3.5" bay, you may as well.

I'd recomend at least a usb floppy, though. it comes in handy for loading drivers and running diagnostic programs.
 

natto fire

Diamond Member
Jan 4, 2000
7,117
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76
I used to think I would need to install a floppy drive to flash my BIOS. Then I found a website to do the same with with a boot CD. CDs cost about the same as floppies. Floppies are worthless, the drives are even worse...

Edit: Just realized people are going to post in this thread "Well you need them to load some SATA drivers"
WRONG! They can be slipstreamed with any Windows XP installation. Face it, floppy drives are worthless.
 

Mik3y

Banned
Mar 2, 2004
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Originally posted by: loki8481
they only cost a couple dollars. unless you want to put something else in the 3.5" bay, you may as well.

I'd recomend at least a usb floppy, though. it comes in handy for loading drivers and running diagnostic programs.

 

nageov3t

Lifer
Feb 18, 2004
42,808
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Edit: Just realized people are going to post in this thread "Well you need them to load some SATA drivers"
WRONG! They can be slipstreamed with any Windows XP installation. Face it, floppy drives are worthless.

it's still a lot easier to do it with a floppy, IMO.
 

grrl

Diamond Member
Jun 21, 2001
6,204
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Originally posted by: LifeStealer
An external floppy that connects via USB


Why bother? Get an internal and forget about it. As loki8481 pointed out, certain things about easier with a floppy.

Who wants to bother slipstreaming and XP or 2k disk to load SATA drivers? What a waste of time.
 

caz67

Golden Member
Jan 4, 2004
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The only time, i use my floppy is when i Format XP and need to install RAID drivers. I have now added them to my slipstream XP disk..
 

Algere

Platinum Member
Feb 29, 2004
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Originally posted by: loki8481
Edit: Just realized people are going to post in this thread "Well you need them to load some SATA drivers"
WRONG! They can be slipstreamed with any Windows XP installation. Face it, floppy drives are worthless.

it's still a lot easier to do it with a floppy, IMO.

Then again it's more convenient to slipstream SATA drivers, service packs, hot fixes, etc. instead of having to download and/or install all of them over again.
 

CJP

Senior member
Jul 23, 2002
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I saw a floppy drive that had various flash card slots in it as well so if I put a floppy in my next system it'll probably be one of these.
 

Sheriff

Golden Member
Mar 14, 2001
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Need=No but highly desirable for other things IMO (Flashing, Ghosting, working in DOS, adding drivers, and other things ) ;)
 

Zepper

Elite Member
May 1, 2001
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If you don't have one, you will almost immediately develop a severe need of one - Murphy's Law of Advancing Technology...

.bh.

:sun:
 

Cheetah8799

Diamond Member
Apr 12, 2001
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Originally posted by: Captain_Howdy
I used to think I would need to install a floppy drive to flash my BIOS. Then I found a website to do the same with with a boot CD. CDs cost about the same as floppies. Floppies are worthless, the drives are even worse...

Edit: Just realized people are going to post in this thread "Well you need them to load some SATA drivers"
WRONG! They can be slipstreamed with any Windows XP installation. Face it, floppy drives are worthless.



Slipstreaming is too much work for simply installing some SATA or raid drivers... All you have to do is temporarily plug in a floppy drive until you are done installing drivers, then unplug it and make the changes to the bios to disable it.... way easier!
 

piasabird

Lifer
Feb 6, 2002
17,168
60
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I have seen some devices from Mitsumi that read both flash memory and a floppy so they take up the same amount of space. I think they were both FDD and USB.
 

Zepper

Elite Member
May 1, 2001
18,998
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If I'm not mistaken, the BIOS boot-block still requires a floppy to recover from a blown BIOS flash attempt - no CD booting included. Of course, you could just have a flashed BIOS chip flown in...
.bh.
 

BHeemsoth

Platinum Member
Jul 30, 2002
2,738
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Originally posted by: CJP
I saw a floppy drive that had various flash card slots in it as well so if I put a floppy in my next system it'll probably be one of these.

Link?
 

lrmat

Member
Aug 17, 2004
157
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slipstreaming does sound like a hassle just to load sata drivers but!!!!!!! since i just built a rig another reason for slipstreaming is so xp can see a drive over 130gigs. i have a sata 200gig drive of which 67gigs are gone until a friend in IT can let me borrow a copy of partition magic to correct this.

slipstream xp, my friend.
 

Sideswipe001

Golden Member
May 23, 2003
1,116
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It's not hard and time consuming to slipstream. Sheesh, I spent an hour to make a CD with SP2 and every device driver I could think of and fit on a CD. Now I have VIA/nForce/Intel drivers all already loading with the OS install, as well as NIC drivers, SATA, a few SCSI drivers, and a RAID controller or two. Oh, and video drivers- though they are generally always out of date.

 

nitromullet

Diamond Member
Jan 7, 2004
9,031
36
91
Originally posted by: rpbri2886
Originally posted by: CJP
I saw a floppy drive that had various flash card slots in it as well so if I put a floppy in my next system it'll probably be one of these.

Link?

I have one of these. It's great. The cards are all USB 2.0 and the floppy uses the standard floppy connector.
 

GnomeCop

Diamond Member
Jun 17, 2002
3,863
0
76
I recently ditched my floppy drive.

I slipstremed some sata drivers onto my XP cd just in case... though I never use sata raid anyways. My sata drives are detected by ICHR5 like normal IDE drives if I'm not raiding them

I can flash my mobo bios in windows, I can even flash my video card bios in windows.
Optical drive firmware is all updated in windows.

Next time I see a USB floppy drive free after rebate I may still pick one up, for the odd times when I want to use those Drive fitness tests or KillDick to wipe my HDs. But that rarely if ever happens.
 

sandorski

No Lifer
Oct 10, 1999
70,791
6,351
126
I didn't have a floppy for a few years, but every once in awhile I ran into a problem that required me to borrow one. The main reason I didn't have one is that I had a full tower case and the floppy cable wouldn't reach from the drive to the controller socket, but I bought a midtower in Jan and decided to grab a floppy just in case something came up.

For the most part they are useless, but still nice to have for the occassional need.
 

duragezic

Lifer
Oct 11, 1999
11,234
4
81
No. Didn't put in a floppy since I built this computer. :) I guess I could put it in in a dire need but bootable CDs tend to do it!