• Re: Today in History - 19

    From Grant Weasner@1:229/317 to Richard Falken on Wed Aug 23 01:24:26 2023
    Richard Falken wrote to Ross Branham <=-

    Re: Re: Today in History - 1977
    By: Ross Branham to Dave Drum on Sun Aug 06 2023 09:14 am

    I would like to know what other old computers are being used for daily busin

    PDP-11 reported in use in a nuclear power plant. They don't plan to decomission the machinery until 2050.
    That is so awesome!
    I love to hear about old system still in use today.

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  • From Grant Weasner@1:229/317 to Richard Falken on Wed Aug 23 01:38:58 2023
    Richard Falken wrote to Ross Branham <=-

    Re: Re: Today in History - 1977
    By: Ross Branham to Dave Drum on Sun Aug 06 2023 09:14 am

    I would like to know what other old computers are being used for daily busin

    PDP-11 reported in use in a nuclear power plant. They don't plan to decomission the machinery until 2050.
    That is so awesome!
    I love to hear about old system still in use today.

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  • From Candy Cane@1:226/18 to Grant Weasner on Wed Aug 23 08:56:40 2023
    Re: Re: Today in History - 19
    By: Grant Weasner to Richard Falken on Wed Aug 23 2023 01:24 am

    I love to hear about old system still in use today.

    Like how WinXP still has a marketshare today?

    Candy

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  • From Richard Falken@1:135/115 to Grant Weasner on Wed Aug 23 16:46:52 2023
    Re: Re: Today in History - 19
    By: Grant Weasner to Richard Falken on Wed Aug 23 2023 01:24 am

    That is so awesome!
    I love to hear about old system still in use today.

    Then brace for bad news:

    THe guy at floppies.com estimates there are floppies left to last until 2026, and then floppies will effectively die :-(

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  • From Grant Weasner@1:229/317 to Candy Cane on Fri Aug 25 01:41:50 2023
    Candy Cane wrote to bbsing <=-

    Re: Re: Today in History - 19
    By: Grant Weasner to Richard Falken on Wed Aug 23 2023 01:24 am

    I love to hear about old system still in use today.

    Like how WinXP still has a marketshare today?

    Well I would have never thought that.

    If winXP is still working and doing the job needed for those using it, I say keep it on and alive.

    For me I'm too paranoid to put a winXP on the network full time.


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  • From Grant Weasner@1:229/317 to Richard Falken on Fri Aug 25 01:41:50 2023
    Richard Falken wrote to bbsing <=-

    Re: Re: Today in History - 19
    By: Grant Weasner to Richard Falken on Wed Aug 23 2023 01:24 am

    That is so awesome!
    I love to hear about old system still in use today.

    Then brace for bad news:

    THe guy at floppies.com estimates there are floppies left to last until 2026, and then floppies will effectively die :-(

    Well that is bad news. Now I'll have to hold on to mine old ones even more tightly.

    There is no need to not have floppies, its like why do we need Polaroid film. They are still being used and I hear making a resurgence.

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  • From Richard Falken@1:135/115 to Grant Weasner on Wed Aug 30 15:29:47 2023
    Re: Re: Today in History - 19
    By: Grant Weasner to Richard Falken on Fri Aug 25 2023 01:41 am

    There is no need to not have floppies, its like why do we need Polaroid film They are still being used and I hear making a resurgence.

    Actually, floppies are still being used for industrial applications. Airlines that use floppies to update navigation systems are buying them in spades.

    As of late, some companies have started investing in floppy emulators. THat's right: you have a fake floppy you instert in the floppy reader, and then you attatch an USB drive or something to the fake floppy. That way you get to use your old machinery without having to buy more floppies.

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  • From Alexander Grotewohl@1:120/616 to Richard Falken on Wed Aug 30 17:45:34 2023
    On 30 Aug 2023, Richard Falken said the following...

    As of late, some companies have started investing in floppy emulators. THat's right: you have a fake floppy you instert in the floppy reader,
    and then you attatch an USB drive or something to the fake floppy. That way you get to use your old machinery without having to buy more
    floppies.

    more likely the floppy drive is an off the shelf part just like in your PC so you replace the whole drive with the device. they're also used in embroidery
    machines which is where i first saw them .. almost immediately after USB flash drives became available.

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  • From Mike Powell@1:2320/105 to RICHARD FALKEN on Thu Aug 31 08:16:00 2023
    As of late, some companies have started investing in floppy emulators. THat's right: you have a fake floppy you instert in the floppy reader, and then you attatch an USB drive or something to the fake floppy. That way you get to use your old machinery without having to buy more floppies.

    I have heard folks talk about floppy emulators and figured that they were talking about software that mounts disk images. I had no idea they were actually a fake floppy with a USB connection. :O

    Mike


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  • From Ryan Fantus@1:218/820 to Richard Falken on Thu Aug 31 18:13:58 2023
    As of late, some companies have started investing in floppy emulators. THat's right: you have a fake floppy you instert in the floppy reader,
    and then you attatch an USB drive or something to the fake floppy. That way you get to use your old machinery without having to buy more
    floppies.

    I use floppy emulators on a lot of my retro kit. Recently I've even started using optical drive emulators and removing old broken CD-ROMs. This is mainly for game consoles but I'm sure we'll see something similar for PCs and the like before long.

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  • From Dr. What@1:3634/27 to Mike Powell on Fri Sep 1 08:05:00 2023
    Mike Powell wrote to RICHARD FALKEN <=-

    I have heard folks talk about floppy emulators and figured that they
    were talking about software that mounts disk images. I had no idea
    they were actually a fake floppy with a USB connection. :O

    That's all floppy emulators do, though: Mount a disk image.

    Depending on what kind of emulator you get, it might be SD card or USB drive, or CF card.


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  • From Richard Falken@1:135/115 to Alexander Grotewohl on Mon Sep 4 15:37:48 2023
    Re: Re: Today in History - 19
    By: Alexander Grotewohl to Richard Falken on Wed Aug 30 2023 05:45 pm

    more likely the floppy drive is an off the shelf part just like in your PC s machines which is where i first saw them .. almost immediately after USB fla

    That too :-)

    But I think I have seen one as I have described somewhere.

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