That ain't much of a bragging point.I still have a 5.4" floppy in my drawers.
That ain't much of a bragging point.
I still have some 5.4" floppies in my drawer.
5.25". I have a PC at work that I use for avionics diagnostics that still has a 5.25" drive.I still have some 5.4" floppies in my drawer.
5.25". I have a PC at work that I use for avionics diagnostics that still has a 5.25" drive.
yeah, since everything boots from USb and CD now there's pretty much no reason to use floppy drives.
Yeah, same here - despite the fact that my new motherboard does still have a floppy connector. 1) I didn't have a cable that'd reach the full distance, around my videocard and goddamn enormous Mugen2 CPU heatsink. 2) I didn't feel like trying to route the cable through the densely-packed cluster of cables that's already in there. Even with SATA drives, it's still pretty packed.
The main thing I've needed floppy disks for was installing hard drive controller drivers during a WinXP install.
Also good for recovering from a botched BIOS flash, assuming the motherboard in question has some sort of very basic commands built in to it. In the one instance where I needed that capability, the motherboard needed a floppy disk in drive A:, with a BIOS file of a specific name.That's the only time I've ever encountered a need for a floppy disk - that and for boot-disks of other software at that time - it's all moved past floppy now, thankfully.
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Also good for recovering from a botched BIOS flash, assuming the motherboard in question has some sort of very basic commands built in to it. In the one instance where I needed that capability, the motherboard needed a floppy disk in drive A:, with a BIOS file of a specific name.
Let's see how long I can go without needing to hook up the old drive again.![]()
Good.Many these days can use USB flash drives or card readers in lieu of floppies. (I recently had to do that myself)