• Saganaki@lemmy.zip
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    30 days ago

    It just occurred to me that younger developers may not see the whole joke here…

    For those unaware, a magnet would corrupt/destroy the contents on the floppy disk.

    • 1984@lemmy.today
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      30 days ago

      First thing i thought of, but yeah, most devs today have never held a disk like that.

      Why do i always gets so extreamly nostalgic every time something from the 80s and 90s are posted… I guess everyone is like that, stuff from their childhood remains loved.

      I think also because it was a fresh field, nobody knew IT so it was exciting. It was like a small interest, similar to collecting stamps or something.

      • mnemonicmonkeys@sh.itjust.works
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        29 days ago

        First thing i thought of, but yeah, most devs today have never held a disk like that.

        Bruh, what? Younger millennials (aka 30-40 yo) were born/raised in the 90’s. I find your claim hard to believe.

        I’m in that group and I still dealt with floppies as a kid despite my family being poor at the time

    • mexicancartel@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      26 days ago

      Out of all possibility of people not understandibg this because magnet corrupt the disk, i actually didnt realise it was a magnet and thought it was sticked to a wall with some black sponge on top and was totallt condused what’s the joke

  • MonkeMischief@lemmy.today
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    29 days ago

    Do I miss the read/write speed? No. Do I miss the capacity? No.

    …But I sure DO miss storage media that makes a satisfying “Kachunk” when loaded, and could be forcefully ejected like a spent artillery casing.

    I’ve seen a few projects that stuff a bunch of flash memory into a floppy for crazy storage capacity, which is pretty cool. Maintains that nostalgia and commands much more respect than one of those ridiculously tiny little USBs that’s easy to lose! :p

    • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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      29 days ago

      Floppy disks were a human size. When we need removable media now, it’s either a microSD card, which are so tiny there’s no way to label them, and thumb drives, which…USB-A is irritating.

    • T156@lemmy.world
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      29 days ago

      …But I sure DO miss storage media that makes a satisfying “Kachunk” when loaded, and could be forcefully ejected like a spent artillery casing.

      Older computers just have a nice mechanical ambiance that newer machines don’t replicate quite as well.

      I don’t miss having the time to go make a cup of tea whilst waiting for the computer to turn on, or having the monitor scream the entire time it’s on, but I do miss hearing the hard drive spin-up, and all the POST beeps and drive stepper noises when the computer’s booting up.

  • rumba@lemmy.zip
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    29 days ago

    I’d give it a 50 chance of still working. Those old ferrite magnets had relatively-weak spread-out fields. It obv would have affected the whole platter, but the drives/software were pretty good at dealing with weak signals. We had disks, we had magnets and some of us were youngish and bored. you had to be a little persistent to even fuck the disk up a little.

    Now, you place a running AC box fan’s motor right up to the drive, i’ll corrupt the f out of the disk, i did that before.