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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 67.128.13.66 (talk) at 21:26, 29 October 2007 (→‎X-10 Fastcache Floppy / 3.5" 10X floppy drive / Accelerated floppy drive). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Former featured articleFloppy disk is a former featured article. Please see the links under Article milestones below for its original nomination page (for older articles, check the nomination archive) and why it was removed.
Main Page trophyThis article appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page as Today's featured article on May 13, 2004.
Article milestones
DateProcessResult
May 4, 2004Featured article candidatePromoted
December 23, 2006Featured article reviewDemoted
Current status: Former featured article

Template:V0.5 Some old or resolved discussions from Dec 2005 and earlier are archived here.

5.25 inch floppies

The Background section incorrectly states that 5.25" quad-density disks had a 1.2 Mbyte capacity. The article as a whole is interesting and detailed, but the table in the background section is terrible. I think that it should be removed. - AndrewBall 02:26, 12 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Is yet another MiB vs MB vs "Mega-bytes" dispute or you're saying the figure is totally wrong and there has never ever been a 5.25" format even close to 1.2 MB? Also, in what way is the table "terrible"? EpiVictor 10:01, 13 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I agree that the table can be improved and may do it if and as I have the time. The problem is both MiB vs MB AND formatted versus unformatted capacities. I think the specific 5.25" FD in question would be called a DSQD FD and have 2 sides, 77 tracks/side, 15 sectors/track, 512 bytes/sector (i.e., the 8" DSDD geometry) for an exact gross formatted capacity of 1,182,720 bytes or 1.2MB. Unformatted I believe the capacity was 1.6MB. YE Data shipped the first such drive in 1982 and I corrected the web site. Because in the early days, the same disk could have a variety of formated capacities, I have been slowly fixing the table to draw the distinction between the unformatted capacity which is the disk manufacturers specification and the various formatted capacities in different applications.Tom94022 21:35, 13 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]
The 5¼" DSQD diskettes that I used (in drives such as the Teac FD-55F) were 80 track, double-sided, 9 sectors per track, 512 bytes per sector, 720 Kbyte drives. I also used 5¼" DSHD diskettes (on the PC/AT and in drives such as the Teac FD-55G) that were 80 track, double-sided, 15 sectors per track, 512 bytes per sector, 1,200 Kbyte drives. AndrewBall 04:25, 17 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Archival, lifetime, refreshing

I think it would be a really good idea to include some information about how long floppies last, how often they should be refreshed etc. Cached 06:45, 21 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

"1 MB = 1,000 KB for floppy storage"

Calling 1440 KB 1.44 MB is a simple error, nothing more. Stating "1 MB = 1,000 KB for floppy storage" is unnecessary. Do we say "pi = 3 for biblical history"? Or "2 + 2 = 5 for confused kindergarteners"? No, we just say that someone made an error. The table at the top of the article is broken at this time. --Yath 01:28, 10 Apr 2005 (UTC)

it's not nice i agree but calling it a mistake when every single manufacturer that sells the things uses it doesn't seem right either.
the fact is mega=kilo*kilo and kilo has two different meanings in computing. If you think of megabyte as kilo-kilo byte and understand that one of the kilos comes from the arbitary measures of the particular disk size and the other from twice the fundamental sector size it makes perfect sense Plugwash 02:32, 10 Apr 2005 (UTC)
It makes sense only when considered an error. I'm going to remove it from the article. --Yath 05:59, 17 Apr 2005 (UTC)

Like it or not it is the normal way of reffering to those disk sizes i've changed the body of the table to use kilobytes only and put a somewhat reworded note at the bottom what do you think of it now? Plugwash 12:53, 17 Apr 2005 (UTC)

A 3/4 inch pipe has no dimension that is 3/4 of an inch. A 2 x 5 at the lumber yard is no-where near 2" by 4" in section. "Trade" sizes may not match physical dimensions of products but are a useful short-cut for product identification. --Wtshymanski 20:05, 4 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Ahh! Your all wrong! 1mb is 1024 kb or 2^10. Definatly worth mentioning.--Ewok Slayer 16:42, 15 November 2005 (UTC)[reply]

800kB 3.5" Macintosh disks?

This site lists some early Macintosh computers (Mac Plus, Mac SE) as using "800kB" 3.5" floppy disks. They don't seem to be mentioned in the article (the only 800 kB 3.5" disks mentioned are for the Commodore 128). If anyone knows how they fit in, please add them to the article. —Steven G. Johnson 15:10, Apr 17, 2005 (UTC)

probablly a format for DD disks The pc formats were quite conservative compared to other formats around at the time. The archimedies version of ADFS also did 800K on dd disks. User:Plugwash
The Mac is mentioned in the "Using the disk space efficiently" section. "400 KB per side". The first version was single sided. Mirror Vax 17:23, 17 Apr 2005 (UTC)
Applie II, Commodore, Victor Sirius 9000, and classic Macs did not use MFM for recording on diskette but rather one or another type of GCR - a different way of writing data to the diskette. A GCR format allowed a bit more data on a diskette but was incompatible with MFM-only data separators. Later Mac's had both types of data separator installed so that they could read both their own and PC-compatible disk formats. --Wtshymanski 20:29, 1 May 2005 (UTC)[reply]
Although it's a common belief, it's not true that GCR provided more storage - just the opposite. GCR formats that allow two 1s (transitions) in a row run at half the clock speed of MFM, which doesn't allow two 1s in a row. Thus MFM is the more efficient format. Mirror Vax 20:51, 1 May 2005 (UTC)[reply]
Would it be more nearly correct to say that GCR gave more data on a disk than FM (what we used to call single-density)? And 800 K is more than 720 K, is it not? In the CP/M days many machines put 390K on what a PC formatted as a 360K diskette, so the difference is not huge anyway. I understood GCR was picked for the Apple II because it didn't need a very complex data separator...I wonder why GCR didn't become more popular. It was a great drawback for some people who only had GCR data separators on their machines because they could never exchange disks with people locked into FM or MFM. (The standard IBM PC disk controller couldn't do FM (single density) disks, either.) --Wtshymanski 23:57, 2 May 2005 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, GCR is superior to FM, but inferior to MFM. The Mac got 800K because of the variable motor speed. On the inner tracks, the Mac only had 8 sectors - less than the standard 9 for the PC. The Mac controller is just a single-chip version of the Apple II controller. This article explains FM/MFM: [1] - Mirror Vax 01:25, 3 May 2005 (UTC)[reply]
btw the acorn archimedies also did 800K on dd floppies (and 1600K on HD floppies in its last incarnations) and i'm pretty damn sure that didn't use a special drive of any kind. Plugwash 15:06, 12 May 2005 (UTC)[reply]
The Amiga did 880K on DD and 1.76M on HD floppies, you could just buy DOS formatted ones and reformat them to work with the amiga. Again no reference to this in the article David Griffith 22:46, 15 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
The original System and applications software diskettes shipped with the original Macintosh had slightly rounded ends in the head access slots under the protective cover. I saw that several years ago when looking at an original Macintosh (Just Macintosh, no 128K designation since the 512K model didn't exist yet) being sold at an auction. If someone could gget a picture of that for the Macintosh section it'd be a nice addition.
The Macintosh's 800kB disk was a constant linar velocity mechanism, where the drive rotated more quickly when the head was over inner tracks, to keep disk/head velocity constant. This allowed them to write more to a disk.
Actual DD/HD floppy capacities are 1MiB and 2MiB respectively. Only the IBM PCAT's brain-dead floppy disk controller required so much space for formatting metadata that around a third of the disk was lost. Systems with direct hardware level floppy access (NOT a PC) could use much more space, an example is the Amiga which was 880k/1.76MiB by default and had aftermarket filesystem drivers to increase that to 960/1.92MiB, uncompressed and on standard disks.
This article is PC-centric, and has no right to be Wayne Hardman 17:33, 16 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

3-inch floppies in Smith-Corona word processors

For a short time, Smith-Corona used a 3-inch floppy disk format which was not quite the same as the one used by Amstrad. I don't have much information handy on this, but I do recall the disk being hard plastic, square, and with one corner "cut" diagonally like its 3½ inch cousin, but without a sliding dust cover door. -- Todd Vierling 16:49, 16 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Smith-Corona used a 3"x3" Quick Disk system labeled, DataDisk 2.8", in some of their word processors.

The FDS is a 3"x4" Quick Disk, other MSX/8-bit computer and Midi keyboards presumably use the 3"x3" and Smith Corona uses a 3"x3" but labeled 2.8"

Would like to see a seperate page on Quick Disk just to list all the technical details and various systems that used drive(s) available for each format so as to unclutter & lighten this section but keep the tech specs avail. 66.82.9.60 05:51, 21 January 2006 (UTC) (what's with this thing---can't keep me signed in!??!)[reply]

Grave ambiguities

Measuremente units are still ambiguous in the article. Measurements are given in both traditional and metrical systems, without stating which one is the precise one and which the approximation. Worse, capacity is given in round numbers followed by both decimal and binary units without stating which one is the correct one.

There is a historical aspect on this. At the time of introduction and martketing of these devices the only designation in use was KB (often just K), or MB later on. So for historical reasons it makes sense to use the KB/MB notation. I even believe that the HiFD format was marked as 150/200 MB formats. However, I do agree that the accurate figures should go somewhere. What I propose to do is to introduce a table for each physical format (a single table for all formats would get too big) giving a (hopefully) clear view of the different logical formats available, but use the terms KB and MB consistently throught the prose. Any objections? Frodet 21:40, 17 August 2005 (UTC)[reply]
I had plannned to include tables like this in the main article. How do the rest of you feel about that? It might be a bit too big....perhaps a separate article?
Table took up too much space and was purged, see Table of 8-inch floppy formats.

DEC RX01 and RX01 formats are ALWAYS single-sided. DEC never offered double-sided 8-inch drives. There were rumors of a double-sided RX03, but it was never available as a product. Some third-parties offered double-sided drives, but when used in a double-sided mode, it was not correct to refer to it as RX01 or RX02 format since such a disk couldn't be read in an RX01 or RX02 drive. --Brouhaha 00:37, 6 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]

I don't know where I had the original information from. I'll look again, but you are probably correct. --Frodet 10:40, 21 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

It's definately needed but the "Floppy Disk" article is already too long[2]. Create a new page "Floppy Disk Technical Specifications"-??? Maybe look around wikipedia and see how they handled it already, but this content is definately useful to post ASAP. Get David Wilson's data and add it too: http://apple2.org.za/gswv/a2zine/GS.WorldView/v1999/May/Table_of_Floppy_Disk_Formats.tx Dcsutherland 06:08, 21 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Encouraged by this, I'll do what you suggest soonish. Thanks. :) --Frodet 10:40, 21 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Kilobaud?

I came to the article looking for the standard floppy drive read speed, which the article states as being "500 kilobaud." Kilobaud? This is an article about floppy disks, not RS-232, right? How about using the more modern KB/sec (or even Kb/sec) metric?

That is a figure I found in the famous fdformat floppy disk formatting utility. Along with other parameters, one could choose between two data rates, specified in Baud, 500 KBaud or 250 KBaud for DD drives. The fact that the data is expressed in Baud merely reflects the fact that there is other (non-data) information written on a floppy disk (e.g. sector headers/stops, CRC etc.) that are read and written along with the "real" data. So, the only safe thing to say is that floppy disks read 500 KBaud (or "symbols") out of a floppy disk, whose "conversion" to real data can be tricky and very variable with one's system or floppy's format. Here's a screeshot of fdformat running on my machine, formatting a floppy. The program states it's using a "500 kBaud Data Transer Rate".

File:Floppy-kbaud.gif EpiVictor 23:33, 6 September 2005 (UTC)[reply]

A baud is a signal change per second. Due to the way single-density FM encoding adds clock bits, a 250 Kbps FM data is actually 500 kilobaud on the media. However, it is more difficult to meaningfully measure double density (MFM) encoding rate in kilobaud. Generally it is more appropriate to measure in Kbps, as others have noted. --Brouhaha 00:41, 6 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]

If this helps, I was testing out the x264 video codec trying to see what settings would achieve the highest quality at the smallest filesize at 1 MB. Anyway I ended up shoving some of the encodes onto a floppy just to see a film running off the thing. I then made encodings that would hit close to disk capacity and for it to be streamed with no hiccups is around 5KB at constant bit rate, on a bought this month fdd made by panasonic. Atirage 05:18, 21 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

5 KB/sec seem a bit too little, even for a floppy. Considering that copying a single 1.44 "MB" file from a floppy takes around 1 minute to 1 minute and 30 seconds, depending on the exact sector shifting used. The actual bit rate (not baud rate) would be something between 128 and 192 kbps, which would be at least 10KB/sec and 15 KB/sec accordingly. Maybe the x264 codec wasn't properly configured to be purely streaming and required lookaheads, or the data wasn't written in a perfectly sequential manner on the disk. Try formatting the disk with fdformat and the X2 Y3 parameters, to minimize access times. EpiVictor

more intro

an article this long deserves a far longer intro. you shouldn't open an article like this and instantly get a huge TOC and spec table filling most of the visible screen area. Plugwash 03:50, 15 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Atari ST had 360K 3½ disks

The original version of the Atari 520ST shipped with 360K single-sided 3½ floppy disks in 1985. (It was also not uncommon to format the disks with 10 sectors instead of 9, thereby increasing the capacity to 400K.) I don't see that configuration listed in the main table. – Doug Bell (talk/contrib) 22:26, 17 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

No mention of 3.25" Floppies or Drivetek

Back when the small floppy format was being thrashed out, one of the leading contenders was the Shugart/Dysan 3.25" Flex Diskette. Housed in a flexible jacket, it resembles a 5.25" floppy, only smaller--and the hub is a bit different. Like the 5.25" media, it uses an applied tab over a jacket notch for write protection.

Dysan's stock number for these was 802950. I have a photo of a diskette and drive, but I'm very chary about editing an article as big as this one and thoroughly messing things up.

Originally the Sony 3.5" drives (OAD-1) were single-sided, 40 track 600 RPM units--something I didn't see mentioned.

There's also no mention of the Drivetek high-capacity floppies that used a unique 2-motor (coarse and fine) head positioner that used an embedded servo technology on preformatted 5.25" diskettes to pack 160 cylinders per side for about 2.88MB. The drive could also handle normal 40 track 5.25" diskettes. Kaypro put these on the Robie for a short time. Kodak eventually purchased the assets of Drivetek in a bankruptcy sale and for a time, continued with product development to obtain about 6 MB on a floppy.

The problem with the Drivetek drives were that they required a proprietary controller and they were incapable of formatting their own diskettes--one had to purchase rather expensive preformatted ones.

71.36.204.61 09:02, 25 January 2006 (UTC)Chuck (http://www.sydex.com)[reply]

You appear to have a good understanding of these early formats. Please go ahead and edit: Be bold. The worst that will happen is that your edit will get reverted. You can not mess things up irrecoverable.
Hmmm......Syndex: You did the Teledisk software?
--Frodet 19:00, 25 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Let me get my notes together and I'll give it ago.
How does one edit images into the text? I think it might be valuable to actually show what some of these things look like.
Yeah, Teledisk (and a bunch of other diskette-based stuff) is ours.
71.36.204.61 03:47, 26 January 2006 (UTC)Chuck[reply]
Excellent! Images are always nice to illustrate a topic. To embedd an image, you first upload the file using the Upload file link to the left (typically) (or Wikimedia Commons, if you can release you image to a free license - then it will be available to any Wikimedia project). You can look at examples in the articles on how to embed images. If you need help, don't hesitate to ask.
What is the status of Teledisk these days?
--Frodet 22:41, 27 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Archaic Technology

Shouldn't there be a section that explains how floppy drive/disk technology is far beyond archaic and how they should all be replaced by something faster, more stabe and data friendly like flash memory cards? ;) 71.112.224.112 04:06, 17 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I think that is clearly stated in several sections of the article, but the "legacy" component and their sheer numbers won't make them "die off" so easily, and so far all attempts at forcibly discontinuing/eliminating them were received with skepticism, at best. They are still widely used for moving small files, BIOS updates, emergency recovery boot, and having a spare floppy or two with oneself is a good idea if small data will need to be moved around, especially from places where it's not possible or not easy to use CD-R or even USB disks (and it does happen a lot). EpiVictor 11:29, 17 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

The 3.5" disk was designed as metric

The article should more prominently mention that the so-called 3.5" disk was in fact designed purely as metric, but when introduced to Merka, it was renamed (inaccurately, at that) to the 3.5" disk because the importing company thought that no self-respecting Merkin would want to be caught dead anywhere near a pinko communist freedom-hating metric unit. JIP | Talk 17:44, 8 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

It gets better. When PCs were sold in Europe with 3.5" floppies, they were often advertised as having "88.9 mm drives." Some metric-loving, smelly-cheese-eaten You-row-pe'n did the math to the nearest 100 microns, but couldn't be bothered to slap a ruler on one of them disk critters to see how big it really was (that would be 90 mm). --agr 21:59, 8 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Are you sure not pissing off metric hating americans was the real reason? Highlighting the fact it was smaller than the previous standard seems a far more convincing reason to me. Plugwash 22:35, 8 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Hmmm, so why is the size of the front of the drive exactly 1" high by 4" wide?

sector:shift is aka cylinder skew in HDD terms

In the "Ultimate capacity / speed" section, the term "sector:shift" is used several times, and it's the first time I've come across the term. From the description, it sounds identical to parameters known as "cylinder skew" and "head skew" in hard drive parlance.

This would be most appropriately explained at the same time as sector interleaving, another technique used on hard disks in the days when disk controllers were too slow to keep up with spinning media. A comprehensive explanation of interleave and skew would be most appropriate on Disk storage, which is just begging for some good content.

I got my understanding of interleave and skew from an old SpinRite manual, and testing with my speed-demon 8086 revealed that a 3:1 interleave was most efficient on that system. Those were the days! Anyway, the printed manual had some great illustrations, and I wonder if Steve Gibson would give permission to use them.

You are probably right about the synonimity of the terms, it's just that fdformat is the only 0to my knowledge- utility allowing to set that parameter, and it called it, arbitrarily perhaps, sector:shift. If there is a Cylinder skew article or reference, then we should link/wikilink/replace the term. EpiVictor 14:06, 11 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Schenk & Horn CopyStar http://www.sharedirect.com/copystar/ does what they call "sector sliding". It also allows creating formats with extra tracks and/or sectors. It can directly copy Microsoft's DMF disks, but can't copy IBM's 1.7M format as used for distribution media for OS/2 Warp 3.0.

Current situation update?

Each time I hear floppy disks being called obsolete my back shivers. I live in a country where they are still a necessary accesory in any computer. Other things like CD recorders are just too expensive and only a select few can have them. I'm sure that the same thing must happen in many other countries. Do you think this could be stated in that section?

USB Keys have become relatively cheap. --Disavian 19:30, 3 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]
So far, all "calls for obsolescence" have proven to be a bit too early: floppies are still necessary in e.g. emergency boots or BIOS updates (OK, there are CDs and bootable USB keys, but not all computers have support for these (especially bootable USBs) , and not all users know how to make a bootable CD or a bootable USB key). It's not a matter of how cheap USB keys or CDs are, it's that neither of them is guaranteed to be readily available and supported at a legacy device level...yet. EpiVictor 12:00, 4 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Obsolete? I always use floppy disks to record images and documents, a disk requires a case which is hard to carry in a pocket. Anonymous

Another testimony against "floppies obsolete" theories: many small USB devices come with a series of drivers that usually don't exceed 1 MB of disk space, and two different game controllers I recently bought: one is a PSX-Dual Shock USB look-alike for PC (2005), the other a programmable arcade stick by Logic 3 (2006), and both came with their drivers on 3.5" floppies. I've seen similar products using miniCDs, but that proves that floppies aren't dead yet...the power of legacy, I suppose :-) EpiVictor 21:35, 21 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I've repeated this below in a similar section but it is relevant here too:

PC world in the UK (a leading chain) has stated that it will not be replenishing stocks of Floppy discs when current stocks run out. It has also stated that only 2% of the PCs it sells still have floopy drives and that by the summer even these will go. This is a significant event in the history of the floppy drive. [3] AlanD 22:50, 30 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Yeah yeah, and Dell and Compaq and who knows who else, as early as 2000 or even 1999 stated they "wouldn't be shipping floppies with new PCs" but floppies aren't dead yet, and they had to rethink their policy. Unless all BIOS updates and emergency boot/service utilities are designed to properly work from USB or CD on EVERY PC configuration of the last 10 years, then maybe floppies will be phased out. Oh yeah, and when they invent something removable and rewritable as cheap and disposable as the floppy. Sorry, but wasting a whole CD-R just to burn 1 MB of files (I had to do that, too, but I never endorsed it) is a waste of time and money, and packet writing for CD-R and CD-RW turned out to be just a clumsy, unreliable and incompatible waste of resources. EpiVictor 12:30, 31 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Faster—probably—but cheaper? I don't know. Isn't it cheaper to produce a CD by now? –KEBo@ifi.uio 13:57, 31 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Let's see...floppies are about 3 Euro a box of 10, as of 2007 (OK, I have paid more than than in the past for special quality floppies, which proved very durable) but let's stick to that figure: it would be 30 cents per floppy. Bulk CD-R come to cost anything from 20 cents to 40 cents, while boxed and branded ones are typically 50 cents to an Euro. If you need to write a file under 1.4 MB, then obviously a CD-R is a waste of money, since it can only be written once. There is multisession and packet writing of course, but those mean an overhead of some MBs (1 or 2 for each packet writing and something like 30-50 MB for each session), so the maximum number of times you could "reuse" the same CD-R is anything between 10 and just short of a hundred, if using packet writing. Sadly, when using a CD-R to e.g. write a 1MB .doc file, who really keeps a box with already "packet written" or open "multisession" CD-Rs just for such an occasion? Most people just waste a new CD-R, close the session and voilà, you have just wasted 99% of the CD-Rs space forever, and it CANNOT be claimed back. A floppy, on the other hand, can be reused hundreds of times, and is much easier to write and read, as it doesn't need CD burning tools or special packet write/read software, and has adequate capacity and speed for small files. Plus, with the floppy I can be fairly sure it will be readable on Windows, Mac, Linux, damn, even SunOS or Amiga, if need be, while with CD-R (especially if using multisession or packet writing) I cannot be that sure. EpiVictor 12:29, 1 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Addendum: what I mean is that yeah, CD-R are by now cheaper to produce than floppies, but they were never optimized for typical floppy usage: small scale, repeated file additions and deletion. Most CD formats were designed for "streaming", continuous, large scale data reads and are typically created "all at once". Everything about them, from their spiral track to their file systems is optimized for that kind of usage, not the one you expect from a floppy, MO-drive or Flash drive. Burning a CD-R takes some minimum time, and stopgap measures such as packet writing proved incompatible and unreliable. So yeah, CD-Rs maybe cheaper but they are uneconomical when used as floppy substitutes. EpiVictor 12:37, 1 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

DMF and other oversize formats

Microsoft's DMF or Distribution Media format is mentioned briefly for its use on the floppy disk version of the original release of Windows 95, but not on the first, bootable disk. Many sets of Win 95 floppies were ruined by a boot sector virus on PCs being upgraded from Windows 3.1x that replaced the special DMF sector zero with a standard, virus infected, 1.44M version. Microsoft did not include a utility with Windows 95 to make backup copies. (I used FDformat and CopyQM to make a backup set to install from. I still have my original OEM Win95 set that has never been used to install from.)

Not mentioned is the "1.7M" format IBM used on some software, notably the floppy disk version of OS/2 Warp 3.0, which came on 20 or more disks. The Warp Connect version had over 30 disks for a complete installation of all features. IBM also included a program to make copies of the disks and the documentation insisted the user first make a backup copy of all the disks before installing OS/2. The utility could also be used to create blank 1.7M disks, which were completely useless due to OS/2 Warp 3.0 not being able to write to the format.


5.25 2006

How do I get my (newish) computer to recognize a 5.25 drive? Can I just run 'hardware' detect, or is it more complex than that? -Litefantastic 00:40, 12 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

You are barking up the wrong tree. You must first change your BIOS settings. Then your Windows OS will automagically recognize it. 69.87.194.177 21:02, 13 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]
As the anon poster says if your connecting it to the motherboards floppy controller after making sure the drive selects are set up right (most multi floppy cables have a twist in them meaning the jumpers on both drives must be set to drive 0) you need to set the drive types in the bios. Plugwash 01:13, 16 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]
You need one of those 34-pin ribbon cables with three or five plugs on it - that has at least one card-edge connector for the 5¼ drive. The plug(s) on the end is the "A" drive, and the plug(s) in the middle is the "B" drive.
The beauty of the 5-plug cable is that either drive can be A or B as you wish.
Then, as stated above, you must run the BIOS update program (hit <DELETE> or <F1> or whatever just after you turn on the computer) and choose the type of drive that matches what you have plugged in.
That's it. There is nothing to do in Windows. I have just done this successfully to my P4 machine running Windows XP, and my classic 5¼ drive, carved out of a solid billet of metal, works like the day it was made. Better in fact.
Back again. There's one thing that can stop this working - if the jumpers have been changed on the back of the drives. But this unlikely and unusual these days.
Well, lessee. I have the drive, and the cable, and I think I'm going to try tech support next. Of course, the fact that I dropped the drive off a table a while ago may not have helped. -Litefantastic 01:23, 27 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Follow-up: Your information was mostly correct, but the drive thinks its a 3 1/2, not a 5 1/4.

wallet?

It is weird that this featured article uses the word "wallet" in the first sentence; I have never seen this word used to describe the carrier shell. (It is hard to find a good word, since the old floppies used a thin flexible enclosure, and new ones use a thick hard shell.) 69.87.194.177 21:02, 13 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Disk / Minidisk / Diskette

Back when I was at uni (in Australia) in the early 1980's, 8-inch floppys were known as "MiniDisks" (or "8-inch MiniDisks") which I presume was a trade name. And 5¼" floppys were then known as "diskettes".

The implication being that a full-size floppy in the minds of the manufacturers was bigger than 8 inches.

But this article indicates that the 8-inch floppy was the original - the bigger 12" ones came later.

Doe anyone else remember using 8-inch floppys on (say) the VAX or similar?

To make things more confusing, I'll let you know I have a box of old 5'1/4" disks labelled as "Mini Disks". "Diskette" on the other hand is a very common and generic name, and was never linked to only 1 kind of disk, from what I know...the "Mini" prefix could have come, however, from a comparison with larger, not necessarily removable drives, like primitive hard disks or even vinyl records. EpiVictor 13:57, 4 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Typical hard disks of the 1970's were 14 inches. Microcomputers in the late 1970's to early 1980's, if they had disk drives at all, typically used 8-inch floppys. The first versions of CP/M, the UCSD p-System, etc. all came on 8-inch floppys. --Rick Sidwell 00:50, 17 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

FWIW, I'm pretty sure the orignal FD introduced by IBM was called the "Diskette." It may have been trademarked. The term "Minifloppy" was used and trademarked by Shugart Associates when they invented the 5.25" form factor. My guess is the rest of the industry then adopted Minidisk to avoid IBM and Shugart. The various form factors competeing for the next generation were generically called micro-Floppies until the industry standardized on what we today know as the 3.5" FD. For some reason Seagate then introduced its 5.25" HDD as the micro-Winchester but that term never took off.
BTW, there were a considerable number of 8" HDD's used on Microcomputers of the late 1970's and early 1980's - nothing by today's standards but large by those days standards. For example, I believe the TRS80 -2 could be bought from Tandy with an installed Shugart SA1000, 10 MByte HDD. --Tom94022 00:19, 18 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]


Regarding the origins of "diskette," when I was a boy in the early 80's, I was fascinated by the IBM System 34 at a local business, and the SA was very generous about letting me gawk at it and answering, or at least tolerating my endless questions. I remember she always corrected me if I refered to one of its 5 1/4" diskettes as a "disk."

The *disks* were the massive 14-inch belt-driven platters that filled most of the machine's cabinet. "Diskette" was the only proper term for the 5.25" floppy. "Floppy," I seem to recall, was considered an improper and unprofessional term in the "big computer" world. --David A. Flory 2:25 26 September 2006 (CST)

Hello?!?!

What is with the "hello" at the beginning of this topic? If you would like this to be removed please type "support" or if you oppose the idea of removing "hello" type "oppose". Be sure not to erase others entrys. Please include a breif reason for why you support or oppose the idea.

Survey

   Add *Support or *Oppose followed by an optional one-sentence explanation, then sign your opinion with 71.65.92.121 20:56, 2 August 2006 (UTC)[reply] 

__________________________________________________________________________

The "hello" you're talking about was a test edit added by an anonymous contributor 90 minutes before you reverted it. Nobody wants it there. Don't worry. Deco 00:18, 3 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Why use formatted capacity

The "Background" section is hopelessly flawed. We're using formatted capacity, but formatted capacity depends on the drive being used, the encoding method being used and the filesystem being used. It depends little on the disks themselves. For example, a 1MB floppy could be: 720kB (PC) 880kB (Amiga FFS) 838kB (Amiga OFS) 800kB (Mac) 976kB (Amiga NFS) But, all along, the actual capacity of the disk is 1MB. Wayne Hardman 18:59, 6 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

  • You raise an excellent point about inconsistancies caused by using formated capacity. I believe it is more correct to say the disk sets an upper limit on gross capacity ("unformatted capacity") and the associatied controller (part of the system not the drive) determines the formatted capacity. The unformatted capacity of floppy disks was usually stated in terms of full track capacity, no gaps, written at nominal rotational speed, nominal data frequency and a specified recording format. As such it was unrealizable mainly due to rotational speed variation. Some folks tried changing the recording format to a more efficient one but that usually led to a higher error rate - TAANSTAFL. If someone has the time, they should change the table to show unformatted capacity and then variations in formated capacities as you did above. Maybe I'll do it if have the chance--Tom94022 19:27, 8 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
This "issue" is already hinted at in the "Ultimate capacity, speed" section, however unless we can find a reliable source saying "data density can't exceed tot bits/cm2" or something equivalent, and find what density was used for each "generation" of floppy disks, including increased densities in the same form factor. Even if sources are found, it will be very consusing speaking of "the 2 unformatted MB era" and the "1 MB unformatted MB era", when readers will probably look for familiar figures such as 1.44 MB etc. Plus, does anyone have an idea what the unformatted capacity of, say, a "360KB" 5 1/4" drive or 3" drive was supposed to be? 400 KB? 500 KB?EpiVictor 14:17, 26 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]
The "reliable source" is the specified unformatted capacity from the manufacturer's data sheets for the disk drives, since in that era the net capacity was a function of the controller - typically provided by a third party. If a system exceeded that density (whatever the bits/cm2) it would void the drive and media warranties. Depending upon the efficiency of the controller, the same drive/disk combination would have different formatted capacities - see Section 7.1 for a discussion of some of the variations in formatted capacity from a medium. To answer your question regarding the "360KB" 5¼ inch drive, I'd have to find the Shugart SA410 OEM manual - I suspect it would show an unformatted capacity of 512.512 kBytes (or 500.5 KiBytes) Tom94022 16:01, 3 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Whatever happened to Randolph Scott the B drive

This is semantic, but it's been bugging me for about five years - too much to forget, but not enough to ever really bring it to the forefront of my mind. Why is it computers don't have B: drives. My first Windows-based computer - a 3.1 machine, built in 1992 - had four drives, which were neatly laid out in alphabetical order. But I've never seen another machine since that had a B: drive. What happened to them? -Litefantastic 02:55, 26 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

In MSDOS machines, A: & B: were reserved for floppy disk drives and hard disk drives were allocated drive letters at boot beginning with C:. Did yr 3.1 machine had two FDD's? Most early Windows were DOS underneath so it continured. I suspect the more modern Windows (NT, NT based and beyond) for compatibility continued reserving the B: designation for the second FDD and designating HDD 0 (Drive 0, IDE port 0) as C: - for example, in my Win2K pro system the B: designation is not available for reassignment to my DVD even though years ago when I had 2 FDD's the second one was designated B:--Tom94022 16:37, 26 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Just to clarify, the A:, B:, etc. designation is not a property of the floppy drive or the computer. It's the operating system which provides the semantics of drives access and how this is done. The [letter]: designation predates MS-DOS and Windows. See also Drive letter assignment. --Frodet 17:19, 26 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Many recent PC motherboards have a BIOS that only supports a single floppy drive. Some of them do still have an 'advanced' option to present the single floppy as B: to the operating system, often labeled something like 'Swap floppy drive', sometimes also mentioning Windows in the option. In any case, Microsoft operating systems all reserve drive letter B: for a second floppy drive. I don't know if this will be continued in Windows Vista.
Technically Microsoft Operating Systems reserve both A: and B: drive letters. And the "Swap Floppy Drives" in the BIOS will flip the assignment of the drives. A: <> B: You can use this with two floppy drives in the system. And to simply assign them backwards. This is us full if you don't have a ribbon cable that will connect correctly to the drives you have based on plug type. Or maybe you need to Boot off the B: drive disk type.
My system for example has a combo A: and B: drive in it. It's both a 3.5" and 5.25" drives in one drive bay. Because of this I have a A: and B: drive on my XP system. I have seen computer with two 3.5" drive in them and again you will have A: and B: drives used. Also it's interesting to know that if you go to a command prompt and attempt to access drive B: (and you only have a drive A:) on any DOS based OS (DOS,Win 3.1,95,98,ME) it will redirect to A:. Also unknown to many people is that floppy drives have a jumper on them much like a Hard Disk that defines them as aether A: or B: drive. By default it's set to B: and a twist in the ribbon cable is used to flip it back to an A: drive. Thus a B: drive would be connected before the twist.

This just may kill the floppy

Staples office supply stores now have a plastic tub at the checkout with 64 megabyte USB flash drives priced $10 or less. Cheap enough to buy as party favors for your kid's birthday party. Makes me feel old to remember that some floppy disks cost more than that for one disk! (Or that a 64M usb flash drive used to be so expensive it was kept in the back room and you had to tackle a store employee to get one for you.)

Once again, the only thing standing between floppy disks and "death" is their role as a legacy device for last-ditch maintenance and administrative tasks such as emergency boots, Flash BIOS updates etc. 193.92.246.52 11:08, 27 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Thing is floppies have come down too. To the point where you can treat them like BIC pens buying them by the boxfull and not really caring where they end up. Flash sticks haven't (and may never given the physical side to them) reach that price point yet. CD-Rs are down at similar prices to floppies but you have the extra pain of buring being a seperate task (packet writing never really took off and preformatted CDs for packet writing were never really availible) that always seems to have a minimum time greater than copying a small file to a floppy. Plugwash 14:39, 27 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Don't be so quick to replace floppies with USB drives - USB drives are notoriously unstable and crash without warning or hope of recovery. Floppy disks last for a good while and are often recoverable after they start to die. Cached 06:43, 21 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

PC world in the UK (a leading chain) has stated that it will not be replenishing stocks of Floppy discs when current stocks run out. It has also stated that only 2% of the PCs it sells still have floopy drives and that by the summer even these will go. This is a significant event in the history of the floppy drive. [4] AlanD 22:49, 30 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Pricing

One point about floppies was their relative low price. Up to the mid-90s 5,25"-Floppies have been the cheapest storage medium on a $ per MB scale. I know many people which used 5,25"-drive on their Macs, Amigas and Ataris troughout the 80ths and 90ths just because those media costs only a third of a 3,5"-media. Crass Spektakel 15:35, 8 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I hope they used the 1.2 MB variety, though :-) Amstrad CPC users did use 5'25" floppies, for one because they could be formatted exactly like 3" ones and were even more cheaper (like 1/5th or even less) than 3" disks, but Amiga and Atari ST...could high density 5,25" be formatted exactly like Amiga or Atari ST disks? Or was it merely used in its standard 1.2 MB format for generic data storage? EpiVictor 17:31, 8 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

heritage

While there was never a direct followup to the floppy one can say that between 1995 and 2005 the CDR/CDRW/DVDR/DVDRW mostly replaced it. Nowadays it seems like USB-storage-systems are going to replace all earlier media, no matter what exactly is connected to USB, be it a magnetic Harddisk, Flash-Memory or optical CD/DVD-drives. Crass Spektakel 15:35, 8 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

There were (and are) some people who waste a whole CD-ROM just to burn 1-2 MB worth of files and don't even use multisession, but there really was no widespread rewriteable medium until 2002-2003, when USB and flash storage really became affordable and supported. As for USB based media...maybe Flash or some other solid state media, but not necessarily with an USB connection. Think about how faster an internal SATA connection is compared to USB 2.0 .... EpiVictor 17:18, 8 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Kibibytes

Who the hell filled this article with kibibytes. Who the hell put those scare quotes around traditional kilobytes and megabytes. Nobody talks about kibibytes. Nobody. 1024 bytes is a kilobyte, 1024 kilobytes is a megabyte. - (), 21:11, 11 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I agree, this whole flapdoodle about a kilobyte = 1000, and a kibibyte = 1024, is just annoying. Considering a kilobyte 1000 bytes even is just incorrect and plain stupid. Even though that is the SI prefix standard, but bases of 10 (which SI is based from) don't work well with binary systems, with its bases from 8. I'm just confused as to why there ever was a (x)bibyte standard (aka the IEC Binary prefix) devised in the first place. I realize that I've answered my own question there, but I thought it would just be understood and assumed that the SI prefixes applied in the world of binary/computing systems would equal 1024, instead of having to come up with a new term for it to reflect such. I never use the (x)bibyte terminology myself, but it seems like everyone else here on Wikipedia has a fetish towards it, IMHO. Besides, calling it all (x)bibyte sounds kind of alliteratively silly, too, like booblebyte. ;) You'd think the IEC would of come up with a better-sounding name. misternuvistor 03:24, 14 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
A proper prefix system for binary would have to be two-based, not ten-based. I propose:
  • 2 bytes = doppelbyte
  • 4 bytes = quadrobyte
  • 8 bytes = eightobyte
  • 16 bytes = sweetobyte
  • 32 bytes = intelobyte
  • 64 bytes = nintendobyte
  • 128 bytes = archaeobyte
  • 256 bytes = toofiddysixobyte
  • 512 bytes = notnearlyenoughobyte
  • 1024 bytes = enoughobyte
Until this rational, reasonable system is adopted, we should probably stick with units that people understand. "Kilobyte" is fine for 1024; if we need to disambiguate, we can say "binary kilobyte", or contrast it with the "scammy floppy-disk makers' kilobyte" of 1000.
Hey, sounds like a plan to me. ;) misternuvistor 08:19, 18 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

You know who screwed up kilobytes? Marketing types. And it started exactly with things like the 1.44MB floppy (sounds bigger than 1.4MB, right? can't leave the competition that opening -- start exponentially increasing capacity and it starts to look even better and better). They took a previously perfectly serviceable and completely predictable understanding (1024 for Base 2, 1000 for Base 10), and shot it all to hell for the sake of 24 bytes out of a 1000. Resorting to kibbles-and-bits or other awkward sounding names that are obviously never going to be generally adopted just adds more excrement to the heap. The solution is to STAND FIRM on the naming scheme that worked in the first place and is still commonly understood, instead of starting at square one, because it's a better battle. If an advertiser pulls something like '1.44MB' then even when this becomes the standard nomenclature, it should always be accompanied by a note that it is technically incorrect. This is just like the 14" monitor thing, by the way. Almost every 14" monitor ever sold was a 13" monitor where they started and finished measuring from a point inside the plastic that nobody would ever see. This practice is endemic to the industry in all forms. Where we are simply naming these products for the purpose of identification, we can use their self-inflated numbers, but whenever and wherever the actual size or capacities are being discussed and compared, these inaccurate claims should be quickly noted and then discarded in favour of the real numbers. Does anyone see a reason to object to this simple rule of thumb on how to treat with these discrepancies?--65.95.120.61 08:50, 2 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

It's always funny how people mock the awkward sounding names. Marketing types care about the sound of names. Or linguists. I'm a technician, I care about unambiguity. Your "perfectly serviceable and completely predictable understanding (1024 for Base 2, 1000 for Base 10)" has flaws. First, bytes are not counted to a base of 2 but to a base of 10. I have never seen a 1'011'010'000 kByte Diskette marketed anywhere. Instead there where a lot of 720 kByte Diskettes out there. Sounds quite decimal to me. Next, it generates trouble on interfaces of Base 2/Base 10. In data transmission, 56kBit/s are 56'000 Bit/s ever since. Same to Ethernet 10MBit/s, 100 MBit/s, 1GBit/s. Because Hz is still counted decimal. Physicist think you are kidding when you're explaining that you can't transmitt a GByte in 1 seconds on a 8 GBit/s lane. In IT there is no consistent naming scheme you can STAND FIRM to. RAM and CDs use binary prefixes, DVD, HD-DVD, BluRay uses decimal. HDDs and data transmission too. EEproms use binary, memory cards and sticks don't. Prefixes have been used ambiguous ever since in IT. Marketing types were just one reason of many. So yes, I see reasons to object to your simple rule of thumb. Use kilo for intended (decimal) purpose only. Use kibi for intended (binary) purpose only. Life can be so easy. But this discussion does not belong here. --213.183.10.41 18:06, 15 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
WELL SAID. I'm an engineer, and I'd be perfectly happy to switch to Base 10 for everything (it's easier to multiply/divide just by moving the decimal left or right). The problem is Computer Memory. You can measure everything else in kilobytes if you want, but when it comes to memory it HAS to measured in kibibytes, because that's how computers think. For example when I upgraded my old Amiga to 1 megabyte, I did not buy 1000 K of RAM. I bought 1024, because that's what the computer expects to see: Base 2.
So to summarize, I think we should probably use Base 10 for virtually everything, except RAM, and only because RAM is so closely-integrated with the CPU (base 2). Everything else including drives, interfaces, networks ought to be Base 10 for consistency & ease of conversion. - Theaveng 14:53, 16 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

FAR

I have nominated Floppy disk for a featured article review because I am concerned it may not meet the requirements of a featured article. Detailed concerns may be found here. Please leave your comments and help us address and maintain this article's featured quality. Gzkn 07:25, 21 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Comparison to punched card storage capacity

The Origins section includes this statement: The IBM standard soft-sectored disk format was designed to hold just as much data as one box of punch cards. The disk was divided into 77 tracks of 26 sectors, each holding 128 bytes. Note that 77×26 = 2002 sectors, whereas a box of punch cards held 2000 cards.

The implication is that a punched card = 128 bytes. I believe the most common IBM punched cards are 80 bytes. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Jmsofia (talkcontribs) 21:59, 10 December 2006 (UTC).[reply]

No 12-inch floppies

I'm 99.99% certain that the claim about 12-inch floppies being used on mainframes is incorrect. Perhaps someone just has a poor memory. IBM invented the 8-inch floppy for use on mainframes, and it was used that way for a long time. They didn't get larger, but IBM did use "magazines" holding multiple 8-inch diskettes on some computers (e.g., System/38, and probably others). If no one provides a citation soon, I'm deleting the 12-inch claim. --Brouhaha 03:03, 18 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Early 8-inch floppies

It might be worth mentioning is that the earliest 8-inch floppies had their index hole near the edge of the disk rather than the location near the spindle that became industry standard. I don't know the full history, but possibly IBM changed the index hole location to distinguish the early read-only disks (used for microcode load, and only written at the factory) from the later read-write disks. There were at least some non-IBM products that used the index-near-edge floppies, as I have in my posession a box of blank floppies of that type made by another vendor. --Brouhaha 03:03, 18 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Who is 'we'

This explains the different numbering labels, while here we generically call the Mitsumi Quick Disk a 3-inch format.

What?

141.199.248.2 18:03, 24 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

IBM Thinkpad and 2 MB floppies

Any information on how to retrieve data from that IBM marketing failure of mid 1990's would be appreciated. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 41.241.149.225 (talk) 21:37, 24 January 2007 (UTC).[reply]

A 2.88 MB drive or even a 1.44 MB drive coupled with software like 22Disk, Anadisk or the Catweasel floppy disk controller may prove flexible enough. EpiVictor 17:11, 26 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Computer Concepts

The link to a company called Computer Concepts in the Acorn Archimedes section is not the right Computer Concepts. The Computer Concepts in question is now called Xara (www.xara.com).KerrySwatridge 12:03, 26 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I've just changed it. KerrySwatridge 13:17, 26 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Floppy as solar filter

In trivia section it is stated that it is dangerous to use a floppy as solar filter. On contrary, in its reference [45] floppy is rated as "marginally safe", so calling it "urban myth", and warnings of retina burn and blindness seems to be exaggerated to me. --Pannonius 14:48, 31 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Floppy Disks to stay?

Does anyone know wheater or not 3&1/2" Floppy Disks are going obsolete or not, because they are really useful. The article says they aren't yet, but that can change. --Hatkirby 11:54, 24 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

They are really going to be obsolete when there will be no more utilities -or any program whatsoever- intended to run off a floppy disk, either by construction or as a last resort. That's not yet the case as of 2007, as many update and maintenance utilities prove. Floppies can't just die, if the only way a manufacturer has to provide BIOS/firmware updates is via a floppy disk program to be ran in pure DOS :-) Yeah, there are bootable CDs but there's always that slight chance that a certain machine's BIOS doesn't support boot CDs or that said boot CDs are broken, or even yet that there's no working CD-recorder anywhere nearby in order to get that essential utility on disk asap...that's where the floppy kicks in, as a nearly 100% guaranteed, supported device. When the last machine capable of BOOTING from a floppy dies, then the floppy as we know it will die (and presumably something else will take its place). EpiVictor 22:30, 24 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]


There are several reasons for calling the floppy disk obselete:

1) Floppies are currently used by computer owners to update firmware or BIOS, instead of their original purpose of storing and exchanging information between users. Also, many computer components and drives can update their firmware without the need for a floppy disk.

2) The incredible proliferation and increased affordability of USB flash drives, portable hard drives, and burnable optical media in the past five to ten years has completely ousted the floppy as a valid form of file storage and exchange.

3) Current versions of programs such as Symantec's Norton Antivirus can no longer boot from floppies, and if either the CD/DVD drive or the main hard drive in a computer dies, the vast majority of users have the computer repaired, rather than try to boot the OS from a floppy disk.

4) Computers have been able to boot from CD's since at least the debut of XP and OSX in 2000-2001, six to seven years ago. Also, users concerned about the information on an older computer's hard drive quite often have the information transfered when they buy a new system, rather than try to use a floppy to access the older computer's OS and stored information.

5) Nearly all small files exchanged between users are sent as attachments over email, and the larger ones are swapped with either a removable USB connected device, or burnable optical media.

6) Many (if not all) computer manufacturers have stopped installing floppy drives on their retail machines.

Some would argue that a small minority of computer users still keep their non-media files on floppy disks. As a former call center tech, I will say that some users do still use floppies. Some people also purchase vinyl record players and analog stereo components for superior sound quality in their home theater. But again, they are the minority in the world of audio. Most buy music on CD's, purchase songs online, or download using P2P software. Likewise, floppy users are in the incredible minority of today's computer society. As the size of saved files continue to increase, and the technology used to store and transfer those files continues towards larger volumes, the ability for floppy disks to remain even remotely viable will very soon come to a quiet end.
Mintchocolatebear 06:11, 5 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Let's see those points one by one:
1) I don't see what supports the "obsolescence" thesis in that statement. As you said, they are used to perform updates etc. and sometimes they are even essential e.g. I cannot complete the installation of Windows XP on a 2005 motherboard with SATA unless I use a floppy disk for extra drivers, and the installation environment cannot use a CD-ROM or anything else for that, so if floppy disks are suddenly to disappear, the installation is not completable, period. Of course, that's likely a flaw in the design of the software itself (relying on legacy technology ALONE).
2) That has been said a lot of times: USB Flash drives are cheap, capient, fast and all but they CANNOT be used as floppy or even as bootable CD-ROM substitutes in many roles, mostly having to do with booting and installation of OSes. True, they are predominant for large file transfers, but that's not a sufficient reason to abolish the floppy just yet.
3) That is mostly a "de facto" situation than an acceptable standard. There are still programs and utlilites created to boot from floppies exactly to recover from disastrous situations. And what are the people doing the repairs or more experienced users supposed to do? Sure, none expects a multi-megabyte program suite to boot from floppies, but it's reasonable to expect basic disk managing utilities to be able to. If they are not...well, tough luck, but I don't see how they can be really useful.
4) Yeah, they boot from CD and then ask you for a floppy to supply missing drivers :-) (at least early Windows XP did, and that was way after the floppy was declared "obsolete" and some manufacturers were so hasty ro remove it).
5) Sending files over email or burning a fresh CD-R to exchance less than 1 MB of data is purely a matter of personal taste. It may be widespread, but it's usually not faster than carrying a floppy across an office or room.
6) If there's a 100% guarantee that even emergency boots, bios upgrades and OS installations can be completed without the need for a floppy disk drive, then so be it. Since it's not yet the case as of 2007, it's just a risky marketing move.
Even a recently bought motherboard (an MSI Neo3) came with a floppy disk for its SATA drivers, and several devices I recently bought came with their drivers on floppy disks, instead of an 8 cm CD-ROM (so there's obviously a lower cost/greater convenience in some cases). Get over it people, unless there's universal hardware and software support for floppy-free computers, floppies won't just yet die. EpiVictor 12:27, 5 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]


I believe that we are speaking of two different ideas:

I am referring to the world obsolete as "no longer used on a large scale, or by a significant number of users."
However, you are referring to the word obsolete as "no longer serves any reliable or necessary function within the current system."

While floppy disks do serve a reliable and necessary function within the OS, BIOS, and firmware, they are no longer a standard form of media used to complete the function for which they were originally designed (information storage). Floppies can be vital to updating and retrieving software on a computer, but they have been almost completely replaced by optical media and USB drives as the standard form of information exchange among the significant majority of computer users.

I guess the way we define the word obsolete determines whether the floppy disk is or isn't obsolete. Mintchocolatebear 20:40, 5 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Yeah, I believe that is closer to the actual problem: the definition of obsolescence. In that sense, certain kind of once-used computer media (including audio cassettes and lesser floppy formats) are, practically, unused and unusable for any practical purpose, including service/updates/etc. But the standard 1.44 "MB" floppy is still actively supported and targeted especially by service tools, so it cannot be defined obsolete in the same sense as e.g. 5.25" disks or cassette tapes.
Regarding the use of the floppy as a means to carry large amount of data, that use is pretty much over, as none will actually bother to compress and split archives into multiple volumes to fit them on a multiple set of floppy disks, except when in really dire need or in a restricted environment (e.g. my old university computer lab using SunOS provided only floppy drives on each computer to take away one's data, and anything bigger had to be either rerouted to the only ZIP drive in the lab or schedule a CD burning session with the administrator....that was still the case in 2003, and UNIX file splitting and mtools became my everyday bread, but perhaps that was an extreme case (and a very poorly equipped lab (D.E.I., University of Padova if anyone is interested).
Of course I don't expect anyone to use boxes of floppies to transfer large amounts of data, but for repeated small file transfers (they do happen a lot in a computer lab/office environment without network file sharing) I personally prefer ejecting a floppy than plugging/unplugging an USB key continuously or wasting a CD-R just to write 500 KB of data, in which case it becomes a matter of personal taste, or even efficiency if you prefer.
In retrospect, all those attempts at forcibly discontinuing even legacy support already in 1998 seems very out of place, and I don't think the industry is yet mature for such a move. As I said before, only when the last machine that somewhere, somehow relies on a floppy disk dies, then the floppy will be rendered really "obsolete". EpiVictor 23:17, 5 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Legacy, not obsolete

I took the bold step to remove floppy disks from "obsolete storage media" and add them to the "legacy hardware" category, which IMHO better suits the actual situation. Floppy disks, at least some of their formats, are not yet "obsolete" and are surely not "obsolete" like e.g. C64 data cassette tapes, but are more like a "legacy device", which needs to be supported because there's no real substitute in certain cases: (try installing Windows XP without a specific SATA driver on certain configurations). EpiVictor 11:26, 14 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I like your distinction between "legacy" and "obsolete," and agree that "legacy" is the best way to classify the 1.44MB floppy at this point in time.David A. Flory 14:03, 17 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Wow, this article is stinky

We need to do some SERIOUS pruning here. The various failed 5.25 replacements need to be taken down to point form, and the large inclusions here either removed or moved into their own articles. There are also several other mentions of one-off formats (like the IBM 4") that need to be moved out of there as well. This is not something that should be in the mainline article! Maury 20:25, 19 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Yes; Wikipedia itself thinks the article is too long as a single item. See Floppy disk format for a first stab at separating out some of the information. It's still overlapping a bit, and not linked from here; it probably should subsume the formatting-related information in this article. Todd Vierling 19:41, 5 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Suggestion: Add information about the interface the FDD uses

The article does not mention anything about the ribbon cable (with curious inverted sections) that the FDD uses, or the interface or bus that runs on it. What bandwidth does it support? Apart from that, the article is very comprehensive (if a bit long - see above)--ChrisJMoor 19:22, 25 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Use in digital camera

This page mentions the 2-inch floppy disks being used in a camera, but it doesn't mention that the 3½-inch disk was used in digital still cameras in the 90s. Sort of like a memory card, except it was a massive floppy disk and slotted straight into the camera to hold 1.4Mb of photos. Heck, it would even be impressive if someone could take a photo of one of these cameras with a floppy half inserted JayKeaton 17:21, 28 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Yes, Sony's Mavica (the later line of Mavica cameras released in the late 90's onward, not the original 1981 Mavica that recorded analog still video frames on the aforementioned 2-inch disks) cameras are the ones you are talking about. They used a standard 3.5" floppy to save images onto, and were readable by a PC, which made transferring images from one of these cameras to a floppy drive-equipped PC quite simple. I have one of these cameras (a Sony MVC-FD91), and I could make an image of it with a floppy partially inserted into it, like you mentioned... misternuvistor 04:08, 3 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
That would be truly awesome. This sort of technology really shows what the floppy disks were capable of and certainly it is a great example of how integrated these disks were in society, rather than just for transferring and storing documents and small files. Plus the picture will look great in this article JayKeaton 16:36, 3 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Actually the Sony TRV-900 Digital Video camera that I purchased in 1999 also came with an attachable 3.5" floppy disk drive (via a PCM-CIA card), that I could use to store still images. It was a rather awkward setup, and since I never used it and it also worked perfectly well in a laptop's expansion slot, I ended up giving it away.--64.229.25.36 11:01, 7 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Dr. Nakamatsu

There is simply no evidence that Dr Nat's 1952 invention, if in fact it exists, had anything to do with the floppy disk drive invention. No Dr. Nats patent are cited on the two IBM patents relating to the invention. Even if the patent existed and was relevant it would have been in public domain by the time of the IBM invention's publication and therefore no more significant than any other prior public art e.g., the German magnetic wire recording. A search on Dr Nat's name is the US patent data base does not support his claim that he has more patents the Edison. Absent a independent verification of his claims he should at most be a foot note in this article. He certainly has nothing to do with 8" FDD's. Absent an identification of this alledged patent I intend to again move this Dr Nats reference to a footnote. We should not support Dr Nak's self-aggrandizement, talk about POVTom94022 01:42, 19 April 2007 (UTC).[reply]

The Japanese page has a clearer explanation of Dr Nat's patent. His patent is of a music scroll which is playable while in its jacket. IBM proactively made non-exclusive contract with him. It's a wise move of IBM so they could avoid potential trouble, and manufacture the product immediately. As for the number of patents that he officially has is approx 600 in Japan. He filed 2000+ patents (that's about his claim 'more than Edison...') but large number of them were rejected even before official evaluation *laugh*. -Kenji

"a music scroll which is playable while in its jacket" doesn't seem to have much to do with a floppy disk drive. Can u provide a url to the patent?Tom94022 17:58, 21 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
unfortunately the Japanese patent db doesn't have it online. It's too old. Anyway I agree that his invention is really nothing to do with FDD. -Kenji

Seperate?

I think that the Floppy Disk Drive should have its own part, so as to remove confusion. Ah2190 12:59, 20 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Japan floppies

I understand that a 1.2mb (not 1.44) 3.5" disk format is popular in Japan? What is the origin of this system? Drutt 01:58, 28 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

It's probably just setting the BIOS to treat the disk drive as a 5.25" 1.2MB one, but there's no point in doing so, and no proof it ever was "popular". EpiVictor 09:29, 28 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Seems to be a proprietary NEC format. I'm guessing it's some sort of anti-piracy measure? Drutt 16:31, 28 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Perhaps it was a remnant from the X68000 system which used both 5.25" and 3.5" 1.2 mb floppies, but it appears very unlikely. Can you find any references for them? EpiVictor 11:08, 29 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
This confusing page is all I could find. Seems to be a consequence of different drive RPM speeds:
I would explain the fact of the figures. On the same head of the same drive, they have changed the RPM (Revolution Per Minutes) to 360 RPM by IBM in USA from 300 RPM that was used in the world as well as by NEC in Japan.
This fact reflects now on 3.5inch 2HD Disc ( High Density Disc ). So we have a reason of using NEC 2HD=1.2MB and IBM 2HQ=1.44MB by two times. But the companies in Japan have realized the method controlled for two types of RPM because of their hating to become an orphan in the world. They say a three mode drive in Japan. But a three-mode drive means NEC 2HD=1.2MB, IBM 2HQ=1.44MB and NEC and IBM 2DD=720KB. I am sorry it does not be included in NEC 2DD=640KB.
Drutt 05:17, 30 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Pretty confusing indeed, and the link somehow "broke" as soon as I followed it, but from what I grasped it's the usual "Quad" vs "High" density argument, which applies mostly to 5.25" floppies. I see no reason why in Japan they should use disk drives with different motor speeds, since they aren't tied to the mains frequency like e.g. TVs, and the switch from e.g. 320 kB to 360 kB took place worldwide along with the systems that used it. 3.5" HD flopies can be formatted to 1.2MB "Quad density" but there's no strong evidence that this was the preferred format in any region of the world. EpiVictor 20:43, 30 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
The history is that NTT (ex-public company, Nippon Telegraph and Telephon) deployed "IBM 8" 2D diskette" standard(1.2MB) for their 5.25" disk. It became wide spreaded in Japan in 1980's. When 3.5" disk was introduced to the market the 3.5" disk drive inherited the 8" spec as well. Since they're following the same spec, software(MS-DOS) needed no modifications, sector-to-sector copy worked just fine. Until Windows3.1 was released in Japan there was virtually no IBM-PC so the world-wide compatiblity wasn't important. Reason? IBM-PC doesn't have a chinese(kanji) character font rom, nor 2byte character generator hardware *laugh*. Well, it was in the age of 8086, 80286. The processor is not powerful enough to render TrueType font for Chinese characters, and RAM was too small for font cache. Anyway , a large number of cheap IBM-PC compatible machines came to Japan with Windows3.1(J), and they've driven the NEC PC (the native) out. 1.2MB format just disappeared since then. -Kenji 10th May 2007 —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 66.80.53.59 (talk) 20:06, 10 May 2007 (UTC).[reply]

Lowercase k always means 1000

Regardless of what happens with the SI prefixes vs "traditional" prefixes debate, lowercased "kB" always means 1000 bytes. If you mean 1024 bytes, use either the traditional capital KB or official standard KiB.

To reiterate, if a disk has 360 × 1024 bytes, write it as "360 KB" or "360 KiB", but not "360 kB". This is wrong, and everyone in the debate will support me on this.

If you actually mean kB = 1000 bytes, on the other hand... good luck, I guess.  :-) — Omegatron 01:07, 14 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]

If you do a Google search on kB memory you will get numerous serious hits such as [5] [6] [7], including stores selling such, where k is being used as 1,024. I agree it shouldn't be so but I am afraid it is :-( Tom94022 04:23, 19 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Indeed it shouldn't be so. And since WP is an encyclopedia, we should strive to clarify such things, i.e. use the correct form and inform about the other (incorrect) ones. IIRC, some of the most ardent "sinners" against the correct usage of KB and MB have been the hard/floppy disk manufacturers, which commonly have been using kB and MB with the 1000-factor, to "prop up" their products' capacities. Often, a disk manufacturer's "MB" equals 1000x1000 bytes, a 5% difference from the correct number. --Wernher 18:39, 21 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
The evidence suggests that M = 106 was and is the correct way to measure secondary storage and that the use of M = 220 is a consequence of lazy and/or incompetent system utility programmers, most likely starting with the Macintosh OS. Same point with regard to k and its incorrect variant K (unfortunately, many persons use k and K interchangeably to represent 103). Disk manufacturer's have consistently used decimal digits and SI prefixes since long before the corrupt binary usage of SI prefixes began. This conversation belongs on the Binary Prefix talk page and not in this talk page. Tom94022 22:55, 21 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Yeah, I was going to point out what Tom did. Oddly enough, this usage of the lower-case 'k' to denote 210 seems to be a confused attempt at more accurate representation of the unit prefix (in my anecdotal experience, someone will realize that there is no SI prefix 'K' and will adjust to using 'kB' accordingly). -- mattb 23:05, 21 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I don't have any counter evidence, but K and M have always referred to 2^10 and 2^20 in every computing context, save storage manufacturers, that I've ever encountered. If I met a sysadmin who used an M suffix and meant 10^6, I'd question its qualifications. --Yath 23:09, 21 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Look above on this very page and on the binary prefixes page and you'll find plenty of evidence to the contrary. While K and M certainly commonly mean 210 and 220, there are many notable exceptions, both historical and contemporary. This issue is frequently muddied by recentism, but there is good reason to believe that early usage of SI prefixes in byte capacity contexts did indeed intend the SI definitions of said prefixes (specifically 'k'). -- mattb 23:14, 21 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
My Commodore 64 (and Atari 400 and Apple II and most late 70s/early 80s PCs) certainly did not interpret "kilo" as 1000. 64 kilobytes of RAM meant 64*1024 = 65525 bytes. And 170 kilobytes of 5 1/4" disc meant 170*1024 = 174080 bytes. It was ALL measured in Base 2. Never base 10. - Theaveng 23:20, 20 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]


Anyone who cares about this issue is welcome to look up old documents and put their findings in Talk:Binary_prefix#Timeline_of_terminology (which should probably be moved to its own subpage). We're trying to find earliest usages of different conventions, so we can put together a rough history of terminology.

All the evidence I've seen completely debunks the "hard drive size inflation" theory. Any time I've found a hard drive specified with an abbreviation, from the 50s to today, the abbreviation has had a decimal meaning (and they didn't use any abbreviations before that). It seems the hard drive engineers were simply being engineers, and it has nothing to do with marketing. The binary sense of the abbreviations originated later, and was directly related to blocks of memory, as I understand it.

Floppy drives, of course, are another matter... :-) — Omegatron 01:23, 22 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Actually I think you will find the same consistency with floppy disk drive manufacturers (all of the early ones were also HDD manufacturers). Keep in mind that FDD's have "dumb" interfaces so that the user capacity of a FD is a function of the controller. Until controllers became semiconductors, e.g., Intel 8271 circa 1977, there were a variety of different end user formats offered, e.g. Apple and the IWM. The drive manufacturers tended to specify the unformatted capacity in decimal bits and megabits or decimal bytes and megabytes. For 8" drives it was common to also state a "typical" formatted capacity, referencing the several IBM standards (SSSD, DSSD and DSDD). Each controller and/or system manufacturer then stated its formated capacities in its own peculiar way - the majors seem to be pretty clean at least until the 3.5" FDD era. Again no evidence of "floppy drive size inflation" by the drive manufacturers. Whether confusion, if any, was inflation, incompetence, laziness or combinations thereof on the part of system and/or controller manufacturers remains to be established. And who gave us the 1.44 MB FDD is a real mystery (BTW to a drive manufacturer it is 2.0*106 Bytes unformatted). Tom94022 06:03, 22 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
My Commodore 64 (and Atari 400 and Apple II and most late 70s/early 80s PCs) certainly did not interpret "kilo" as 1000. 64 kilobytes of RAM meant 64*1024 = 65525 bytes. And 170 kilobytes of 5 1/4" disc meant 170*1024 = 174080 bytes. It was ALL measured in Base 2. Never base 10.

Which makes sense to me. Anything that is connected to a computer, whether it's memory or a disc or a USB flash or whatever, should be measured using Base 2 binary, because that's how the computer "thinks" and measures things. Computers never used Base 10 and neither should the things attached to it. - Theaveng 23:20, 20 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Then start measuring using Base 2 binary if you want to. Me, I think, 720 KByte is a bit more handy than 1'011'010'000 kByte. There is no problem using Base 2 for memory. It is just no good idea using allready occupied terms for that. By the way, my modem and network interface cards are connected to my computer, transmiting data dependend to a frequency measured in decimal Hz. For that reason, 100BaseT means 100 000 000 Bit/s when it says 100 MBit/s.--213.183.10.41 18:44, 15 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Good argument. I'm going to have to change my mind, and I agree that Base 10 makes more sense. It's easier to convert from one unit to another if you just move the decimal left or right. - Theaveng 14:58, 16 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

2.88 MB Intro Date?

On the release date for 2.88 MB drive, there seems to be a contradiction between this article and the IBM PC article. It is 1988 versus 1991. 68.113.47.82 03:23, 4 August 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I suspect the IBM PC article is incorrect since it says it was an "instant failure" which is blatantly wrong (the format lasted several years before IBM finally gave-up on the idea). That sentence from the IBM PC article is likely just some person's hazy memory w/o any kind of research done. - Theaveng 21:59, 20 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]


Any estimates on total number of disks produced, annual production?

Does anyone have any data on the total number of disks ever manufactured? Or data on annual production rates over the years? This was the primary mode for portable transportation of zeroes and ones for many years! I imagine there are BILLIONS of these things in landfills around the world. If anyone has any links to any estimates, I'd be very grateful. Thanks, --Beagley 18:50, 27 August 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Well, I personally own 1000 (accumulated 10 or 100 at a time, over the last 20 years), and if that's the average for every computer user, and there are 1 billion users in the USA, Europe, and Asia, then figure 1 trillion discs. - Theaveng 21:59, 20 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

TRIVIA - Writing to a DD disk is a bad idea?

"It is important to note that due to read/write voltage differences in the heads of DD vs. HD disks, writing to an HD floppy with a DD drive (or an HD drive in DD mode) is widely considered to be a highly unreliable method of storing data." That doesn't make any sense. It's comparable to saying, "You can't use a S-VHS tape in a VHS unit" or "You can't use a CD in a DVD unit." In my experience, there's no harm in using higher-quality media at a lower-quality setting.

I think this "factoid" needs a citation. And if no citation is available it should be deleted. - Theaveng 21:59, 20 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

This warning has been around since uhm...almost always, and may have been true when comparing older DD floppies with the first HD ones to hit the market. The real question is when "true" DD floppies were replaced by "DD disks with HD coating": in fact, with the phasing out of DD drives, most floppy manufacturers started using the same (denser) HD magnetic coating for both DD and HD floppies to cut on manufacturing costs. That was also one of the reasons why that old "punch a hole into a DD floppy to magically turn it into a HD floppy" story worked seamlessly. I don't know if that had the side effect that the "newest" DD floppies were less reliable than "older" ones in DD drives, but it surely improved HD/DD "compatibility", since the medium was the same. I guess it would only make a difference if you tried to format a heavily used "DD" disk (with HD coating) in a DD-only drive: an unformatted one could have worked, an overwritten one may have had trouble demagnetizing in the weaker DD drive. I will try to find some sourcing for those points. EpiVictor 14:16, 21 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks. People also believe Betamax provides a "better picture" than VHS..... but when pressured, they can not find any engineering citations to support the claim (because both standards share virtually identical specs of 3.1 megahertz bandwidth & 250 lines resolution). They can find lots of lies... er, marketing brochures from Sony; but not engineering tests that have true validity (and unbiased) There's a difference between what people believe, and what is reality.
I'd just like to see a Reliable engineering citation that states, "You can not format HD discs as DD discs, because it risks data loss, because ____ and ____ and _____." (If we assume that to be true, then I probably shouldn't be using Super VHS blanks in my old VHS vcr either.) - Theaveng 18:24, 21 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Well, in the case of VHS and SVHS there is indeed a different response of the magnetic coating, for which VHS and SVHS recorders and players are calibrated. The very least you would get a distorted recording if tried to swap tape types. With floppies, since recording uses only two levels, this effect can be masked or go unnoticed under certain circumstances, but it becomes dead-obvious in analog media (e.g. VHS, audio cassettes). EpiVictor 13:10, 22 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

The speed rating needs clarification.

"3½-inch HD floppy drives typically have a transfer rate of 500 kilobaud." Okay. So 500 kilosymbols per second. How fast is that in bits? 500k*2 bits/symbol == 1000 kilobits per second? And how does it compare to other standards like CD or DVD? I have no clue, and I suspect neither do the people reading the article, so I suggest we use a more meaningful speed measure. - Theaveng 21:59, 20 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Perhaps you'd like to see the definition of a "baud" and the subsequent "baud rate". There's no simple way to associate bauds to bits, although an incorrect, approximate method is to say that 1 baud equals 1 bit/sec, by equating kbaud with kbit/sec. This is only accurate if there are no redundant bits like headings/tails/error corrections/sync signals etc. So 500 kbaud means a top limit of 500 kbits/sec, or 62,5 KB/sec. For comparison, 1x CD-ROM is 150 KB/sec, 1x DVD-ROM is about 9 times as fast as 1x CD-ROM (1350 KB/sec), a mid-1990s PIO mode IDE HD would be at best 1-2 MB/sec, while modern IDE and SATA HDs exceed 10 MB/sec. Of course in reality the actual data rate will be much less than that, and very few floppy formats can provide a sustained data rate of more than 50 KB/sec without pauses. The term "baud" is used exactly to indicate that not all symbols transmitted are "useful data", but just the speed at which the controller can process the raw floppy data itself. EpiVictor 14:00, 21 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I looked at the definition of Baud and see no reason to confuse the issue since the typical transfer rate of a 3.5' FDD is 500 kbits/sec measured as user bits and has been specified that way since nearly day one. The particular code is MFM which maps 1 data bit into 2 channel bits with a (1,3) RLL constraint so I suppose u could some how use the channel bit rate of 1 Mbit/sec to come up with a baud rate of 500 kbit/sec, but to what purpose other than to confuse the reader by introducing an term, baud, not used in the FDD industry. At least during the data portion of the sector the user data rate is typically 500 kbit/sec. So I propose changing the language to kbits/sec. Tom94022 17:03, 21 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I disagree with EpiVictor's comment that baud and bits can not be easily equated. Look at a 300 baud modem. That simply means that the modem is sending 300 symbols per second, and each of those symbols can represent one bit, therefore 300 bits per second. ----- If you represents 4 bits per symbol, then the baud rate is still only 300 baud, but you've increased the bitrate to 300*4 = 1200 bits per second. ---- If you represent 64 bits per symbol, then the baud rate is still only 300 baud, but you increased the bitrate to 300*64 = 19,200 bits per second.
Anyway, you get the idea. "Baud" simply means "symbols per second". If each symbol can represent X bits, then its a simple calcuation: BAUD * X symbols/second = bitrate. So my question was, assuming the floppy is 500 kilobaud (kilosymbols per second), how many bits are represented by each symbol? 2 bits/symbol?
(Aside: This is one of they hazards of using people's names as units of measure. If you say symbols/second or cycles/second that unit of measure is self-explanatory. If you say Baud or Hertz, people not familiar with the term will be left scratching their heads. Hence the widespread confusion among many people of what "baud" really means.) - Theaveng 18:37, 21 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I think the DSHD 3.5" FDD data rate is 500 kilobits/sec, see List Of FD Formats. These are user bits not channel bits. Also, I think the comparisons to CD and DVD are inapposite since I believe their data rates are also gross of ECC, header, gap etc. I'll do some more checking before i edit the article Tom94022 06:12, 22 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

1.44 kilo-Kibibytes - what a mess the marketers created

And I say "marketers" because no engineer would be stupid enough to combine Base 2 with Base 10. Anyway, I rewrote the paragraph so it will be easy-to-understand, even for people who are not technical. (I hope.)

".....11,474,560 bytes or 1.47 million bytes (1.47 Megabytes). In the Base 2 binary prefix numbering system used by computers, 1,474,560 bytes is exactly 1440 kibibytes (1.4 Mebibytes). ---------- However, neither of these numbers is generally used. The number most frequently printed on such floppies is "1.44 MB" which incorrectly combines Base 2 (1440 kibibytes) with Base 10 (1.44 kilo-kibibytes). Thus the label "1.44 MB" is not correct usage of the SI terminology and leads to confusion for users. ---------- A person expecting the "1.44 MB" number to be stated in either the binary or the decimal prefix would miscalculate the number of floppies needed. The term 1.44 MB implies that the floppy holds 1,440,000 bytes of data, which is false. Likewise the term 1.44 MiB implies the floppy holds 1.44*1024*1024 == 1,509,949 bytes, which is also false. (The only proper way to interpret the erroneous "1.44 MB" label is as 1.44 kilo-kibibytes which yields 1.44*1000*1024 == 1,474,560 bytes.)"

I know that's not perfect, but then neither was the frakkin' idiot who combined Base 2 (1024) and Base 10 (1000) numbers to create nonsense numbers like 1.44 MB (1.44 million bytes) which is erroneous. - Theaveng 22:48, 20 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

IBM 12 inch FDDs

From personal experience I am fairly familiar with IBM's disk drive products, flexible and rigid, and cannot recall IBM ever having a 12" FDD. Nor do any of my colleagues, many ex-IBM, have any such recollection. Absent a citation, I have marked this section disputed. Tom94022 05:20, 24 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

After further checking with ex-IBM personnel I confirmed there was no such IBM 12" FDD in production on IBM mainframes and deleted the section. It maybe the original poster got confused with the Iomega products which were done by a spinout of IBM. Tom94022 21:04, 7 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

X-10 Fastcache Floppy / 3.5" 10X floppy drive / Accelerated floppy drive

I recall an ad for a 10x 3.5" floppy drive in ads. It used in part: 1.5MB DRAM cache ram, two seprate heads, and faster motors to read and write the floppy 10X faster than normal. The only reference I have is an old newsgroup article from 1996 listing Corporate Systems Center (CSC), corpsys.com, "X-10 Fastcache Floppy".

A separate article on this could be justified if someone has more info on this 'one off'. It was not a LS-120 or any other type of combo device.

Nov 1996 Dr. Dobb's article about it. (At the end.)

http://www.ddj.com/184410009