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Do you or anybody you know still use Floppy Disk?

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Fern

Elite Member
Sep 30, 2003
26,907
174
106
I have some old drives laying around, but haven't used them in a while. I used to use them to run tests on new builds before I installed them in the case and also used a zero-write proggy to nuke HDD's etc.

Fern
 

Saint Nick

Lifer
Jan 21, 2005
17,722
6
81
I still use it as a "Save" icon in my applications. Most of the people I'm developing for still remember what that things is, and it's use in previous applications.

Someday we're going to have to find a new icon that means "Save".
 

TwiceOver

Lifer
Dec 20, 2002
13,544
44
91
We were doing end of year cleaning and someone walked into my office with a massive stack of floppy disks...

"No, no, no, don't even bring those in here. Trash!"
 

lxskllr

No Lifer
Nov 30, 2004
60,088
10,561
126
Nope, but I still can't bring myself to throw the old software/driver/whatever disks away. Aside from installing some old software at work about 10 years ago, I haven't used a floppy myself since the 486 was a current machine.
 

Jeff7

Lifer
Jan 4, 2001
41,596
20
81
It's been awhile. I had them around because booting off of a USB device was still kind of dicey. A lot of stuff had to be working properly for that to happen - not so good if you're trying to troubleshoot something. Booting off of a CD was also just annoying because quickly adding a file or tweaking something meant reburning the disc.

BIOS flashing also didn't always work so well if done off of a thumbdrive.



Now you damn kids these days have your Windows-based BIOS flashing utilities and USB thumbdrives that actually boot properly.





My dad was thrilled because they finally retrofitted his Wire EDM's to use USB thumb drives instead of floppys. This was no joke like 2 weeks ago.
This stuff fascinates me.

New equipment is expensive!
Yes, and it's also expensive to waste labor doing menial crap like waiting for an old floppy disk to do its thing, or worse yet, a roll of paper tape for an old NC machine, when a perfectly good network cable could do the trick in an instant. And the newer machine would probably offer all kinds of fun new features you'd find a way to use.
Your operators should be turning out parts that make the company money. Customers are more willing to pay for parts than they are for someone to serve as a data transport platform when wires or radio waves can do the same job a lot more quickly.

It depends on the company's culture though, that's for sure. There's a lot of "This works fine. Go away and stop trying to change things."
And Kodak decided that digital cameras were going to be little more than a short-lived fad. I'm sure that that decision was influenced by the nagging thought "But changing will be expensive!" Being late to a new market is also expensive, moreso if that market is also busy digging your company's grave.
That's also referred to as "stagnation."
 
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lupi

Lifer
Apr 8, 2001
32,539
260
126
I know someone around here that was telling me how a couple years ago they were looking for a school to send someone to for some type of machine language programming training as they had sometype of old inventory program and the last guy that knew anything about the language had retired. The search turned up some place in the middle east as the only location still offering training so they pretty much said screw it, we'll just run it best we can till the replacement is ready to come on line.
 

Drako

Lifer
Jun 9, 2007
10,697
161
106
We have some shitty old Tektronix scopes in our lab that have a floppy interface. It's the only way to get screen caps off of them. Recently got rid of all the older PCs at the office too, so I had to do a Fry's run and get one of those cheap USB floppy drives. :)
 

highland145

Lifer
Oct 12, 2009
43,973
6,338
136
Nope, but I still can't bring myself to throw the old software/driver/whatever disks away. Aside from installing some old software at work about 10 years ago, I haven't used a floppy myself since the 486 was a current machine.
You're waiting for a Y2K repeat and the need for fortran programmers, aren't you?
 

mikeford

Diamond Member
Jan 27, 2001
5,671
160
106
Had to install windows on a machine once via floppy and disc #32 or so kept failing, and of course tech support wants me to do it again and again. Don't recall if it ever worked.
 

MongGrel

Lifer
Dec 3, 2013
38,466
3,067
121
We use them at work to load programs into a HAAS CNC mill.

USB Thumb sticks work better, unless it's a really old HAAS.

*edit* NM it probably is, or wouldn't have a floppy I guess.
 
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lxskllr

No Lifer
Nov 30, 2004
60,088
10,561
126
You're waiting for a Y2K repeat and the need for fortran programmers, aren't you?

You never know!

Rarely I have a need to work with archaic software, but it can be a real time saver. Odds are I'll never need the floppies, but if I do, a replacement will be difficult or impossible to find. I weigh that against the trivial storage issue, and keep them until a later date. I'll look through the great archive of crap with the intention of thinning it out, but I mever manage to do it.
 

highland145

Lifer
Oct 12, 2009
43,973
6,338
136
You never know!

Rarely I have a need to work with archaic software, but it can be a real time saver. Odds are I'll never need the floppies, but if I do, a replacement will be difficult or impossible to find. I weigh that against the trivial storage issue, and keep them until a later date. I'll look through the great archive of crap with the intention of thinning it out, but I mever manage to do it.
I've got the same problem. Norton ghost on a floppy...I might need that one day.

At least they aren't 5.25 like in Printer's link....or cards...:eek:

Or paper tape...OMGWTHBBQ

:D
 

Ichinisan

Lifer
Oct 9, 2002
28,298
1,235
136
i know someone around here that was telling me how a couple years ago they were looking for a school to send someone to for some type of machine language programming training as they had sometype of old inventory program and the last guy that knew anything about the language had retired. The search turned up some place in the middle east as the only location still offering training so they pretty much said screw it, we'll just run it best we can till the replacement is ready to come on line.

COBOL?

caps
 

lupi

Lifer
Apr 8, 2001
32,539
260
126
it was about a year and eight months ago when I heard him tell the story and don't recall if he said the exact name, but he's a mechanical engineer by trade who got posted to management of the software group so he probably wouldn't have remembered anyway.
 

tcsenter

Lifer
Sep 7, 2001
18,937
568
126
I haven't used one in over a year (IIRC for a BIOS/firmware update) but I still have three never-used internal 1.44MB floppy drives, cables, and a couple 25-packs of diskettes packed away somewhere around here. Also purchased two external USB floppy drives a few years ago, to have them just in case, because so many motherboards began to nix the onboard floppy controller.
 

mmntech

Lifer
Sep 20, 2007
17,501
12
0
She won't accept it even when it's not floppy unless it's a blue moon, a wolf just howled, and she had a P-E-R-F-E-C-T day.

But first you have to hear about the perfect day.

That's cause you ain't got game (disks) son.
gamedisk.jpg
 

DigDog

Lifer
Jun 3, 2011
14,652
3,011
136
somebody, quick! find me a screwdriver so i can calibrate the azimuth on my 1530 tape drive!!
 

Paperdoc

Platinum Member
Aug 17, 2006
2,499
374
126
Last time I used a 3½" floppy probably was to flash an updated BIOS to my mobo. I think the BIOS code became corrupted and had to be replaced. I don't trust a low-level critical job like that to Windows. Before that, a few years ago I used a floppy to install the RAID drivers in a Win XP install (different machine) so the machine could boot from the RAID1 array.

I still have an old machine with both 3½" and 5¼" floppy drives in it If I ever need to read very old media. Have not needed that, though, for a LONG time.
 

Carson Dyle

Diamond Member
Jul 2, 2012
8,173
524
126
I still have a small box of floppy disks and even a couple of floppy drives somewhere in a box of parts. But I haven't used one in years.

I got to thinking recently that other than for for the occasional operating system installation, I use my USB keys less and less with every passing month. I keep media files on my network file server and use Dropbox as a way of working with common files on multiple PCs. I'm almost ready to ditch the USB key on my key ring.
 

Captante

Lifer
Oct 20, 2003
30,353
10,876
136
About 6 years ago I transferred or copied the last files I had on floppy to CDR, although I did hold onto a few original DOS install disks, Win 95/98 boot disks etc.

I also have a fully functioning Athlon XP based system running Win 2k that has a FD installed, several loose 3.5 inch drives and even one functioning 5.25 inch drive sitting around in box's, along with a couple UBS FD's.