Description: Features 5.25" form factor Single Board Computer Pentium III Socket 370 Processors 533-1G mhz Intel Celerion, Cyrix III, VIA C3 Up to 256 MB SDRAM in one 168-Pin DIMM socket, PC100/PC133 ...
Although mechanically sound, the drive had trouble reading disks, and Adrian quickly set out to fix the issue. Using a Greaseweazle—a versatile open-source tool for floppy disk diagnostics—he ...
In fact, Shugart himself left IBM and transitioned to Memorex in 1972, helping the company deliver the first commercially available read-write floppy disk drive (the Memorex 650). A hallmark of ...
This doesn’t work for imaging disks from other older platforms, but he provides pointers to more capable floppy controllers for that. If these drives interest you, there’s more to be gleaned ...
History Computer (US) on MSN16d
Floppy Disks: A Brief History
Floppy disks, if you’re older than 30, you likely remember these from school. In the days before CD-Rs, thumb drives, and ...
External USB/Thunderbolt drives (aka direct ... see PCWorld’s article on how we test internal SSDs. HDDs (hard disk drives) have been around for more than 50 years. They are essentially boxes ...
Hitachi Rail contract inked by SF transport board will kill the throwback San Francisco's Muni Metro could be finally getting ...
The San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency (SFMTA) board has agreed to spend $212 million to get its Muni Metro light rail off floppy disks.
This isn't the only example in recent memory of a government finally doing away with floppy disks. This past year ... era when computers didn't have hard drives." It's also worth noting that ...
in 1983 became the first company to build hard drives using the 3.5-inch form factor which had previously been used by Tandon and Shugart Associates for building floppy disk drives. 1981 ...
In brief: The San Francisco Muni Metro's Automatic Train Control System (ATCS), one of the few remaining major systems still using floppy disks ... the external division of Japanese tech giant ...
1 The original machine was powered by a 5 MHz Motorola 68000 processor and included support for a hard drive, and shipped with two “Twiggy” floppy disk drives. Officially known as “FileWare,” this ...