Brewster Rockit by Tim Rickard for February 15, 2021

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    LookingGlass Premium Member about 3 years ago

    What’s a floppy disc?!!

    /SNARK/

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    mr_sherman Premium Member about 3 years ago

    He’s not that old. Otherwise they would be 5 1/2 inch or larger.

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    Zykoic  about 3 years ago

    Back in the 70s I built a computer and the floppy drive was very expensive. Paper tape, front panel switches, teletype and a used monitor was a bundle of money. A data subscription was $30/month to down load daily commodity prices after markets closed. Wrote the assembly code for the acoustic modem. We rode stage coaches and liked it! We’ve come a long way!

    (Wish I had kept it all. A museum piece.)

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    Say What Now‽ Premium Member about 3 years ago

    In the early 70’s I took a course in Fortran . We had to write the program, punch the cards, give them to the operators then come back the next day to see the results.

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    Gent  about 3 years ago

    Well, at least he didn’t use gramophone records.

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    Major Matt Mason Premium Member about 3 years ago

    I got a floppy disc, but my doctor says that’s normal at my age.

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    Jeff0811  about 3 years ago

    When it comes to technology, Oldbot is all thumb drives.

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    jr1234  about 3 years ago

    Don’t throw them out. A time traveler may come back and NEED them in the future or the past. Like John Titor

    https://www.coasttocoastam.com/guest/williams-oliver-5638/

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    Brian Fink  about 3 years ago

    Those are NEW floppies. How are they supposed to work with the 8 inch and 5-1/4" drives?

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    Lawrence.S  about 3 years ago

    Sigh… The problem of aging… You go from hard drive to floppy disk.

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    WaitingMan  about 3 years ago

    I’m not behind technologically. Check out my cool avatar.

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    julie.mason1 Premium Member about 3 years ago

    The tablets I grew up with were clay. As noted by many above, they still have older data storage without the devices to access that data. The raw data for the US Census is unavailable for the ones before 2010. Not sure how long 2010 will be readable.

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    blakerl  about 3 years ago

    I have a backup copy of Windows NT 3.1 on 22 floppy discs.

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    random boredom  about 3 years ago

    One of these is 1.44MB at the most, so what he has in his hand is … what, 200MB of data backed up at the most?

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    betseytacy  about 3 years ago

    we salvaged an Apple IIe computer when our local school was throwing them out. is it worth saving???

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    dcrossman  about 3 years ago

    At least they’re not 5¼ inch floppies.

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    geese28  about 3 years ago

    Floppy disks, the new archeological discovery

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    stamps  about 3 years ago

    Put them with the punch cards.

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    mistercatworks  about 3 years ago

    I remember when a floppy disk was as big as a mortarboard hat. I was in the last class at my university that punched programs onto Hollerith cards. A computer was bigger than a house trailer. You came in late at night to submit your software because undergraduates had “Z” priority. I impressed some nerds at a science fiction convention by remotely accessing my campus account via a modem which cradled the pay phone’s handset. And there was nary a female in the computer science program. Different times.

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    cuzinron47  about 3 years ago

    Yep, I remember the great floppy exchange when backing up my computer.

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    The Brooklyn Accent  about 3 years ago

    I gave a box of old 3½" floppies (with shells in multiple colors) to my son’s girlfriend about a decade ago. She decorated their coffee table by gluing a layer of them to the top.

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    R.R.Bedford  about 3 years ago

    Put them next to the file cabinet full of onion skin carbon copies.

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    ferddo  about 3 years ago

    Still remember how our engineering department manager was confounded by the (then new) 3 1/2" floppy disk – because it was stiff instead of floppy…

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    bopard  about 3 years ago

    Yay Paper! Pbbbt electric. There’s military documents that got soaked 125 years ago frozen molded, and are still very readable. So are the volcano cooked Herculaneum scrolls (infra-red boosts 600 au human eye range for the tough ones here) Electronic only good for porting, indexing, fast retrieval. Original always best for actual data.

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    DCBakerEsq  about 3 years ago

    Going through old files the other day I stumbled across a bunch of floppies. Kids were really confused when I tried to explain.

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    paullp Premium Member about 3 years ago

    One of my older PCs has a 3.5" floppy drive (you can also buy an external one online for about $15). On occasion, I’ve know someone who had to have files from such a disk copied to newer media, and I was at the ready!

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    Bilan  about 3 years ago

    You have to give Oldbot credit for finding all of those floppies. That’s probably half of what’s left in the world.

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    Dragoncat  about 3 years ago

    What’s a Floppy Disk, you ask? Just look at any Save icon

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    aunt granny  about 3 years ago

    Stationery stores used to carry mailers for floppy disks.   I used them to swap fanzines with other editors.

    Now there aren’t any stationery stores.

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    bakana  about 3 years ago

    I’ve got a large box containing several hundred of those disks in my garage.

    Of course, I no longer have a Floppy Drive in my computer since they no longer put that connector on Motherboards.

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