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Here's something interesting;
When you're installing windows 7, you could run into the problem that every step takes an awful long time to load. Nothing happens or 5 to 10 minutes and all of a sudden stuf works again, until the next step. I've just been staring at 'setup is starting' for 10 minutes and I figured that I didn't want my whole setup to go that way, so I did some googling. Turned out the solution is turning off your floppydrive in the bios (!). People had similar problems with hooked up cardreaders and iPods. Apparently 7 setup checks for stuff on every drive every now and then. Which is annoying. So remember that; Slow Windows 7 setup? And I don't mean sluggish, I mean slow as in, nothing happens for long periods of time, no HDD action, no CD action; Turn off your drives with removable storage! |
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And people still have floppy drives? O_o |
When windows 7 is installing. The installation itselves is really really slow then.
And what you ask reminds me of another thing: If you have an asus laptop and it boots ****ing slow, check if there's a card in the cardreader :D I use floppy drives, yes. I mess around a bit with old Laptops and MSX computers. And if I remove the floppy drive there's a hole in my computer. I will replace it with a cardreader soon, though. I'll juse an external usb floppy drive. |
Our desktop computer has a floppy drive, but it's almost 10 years old! I stopped using floppies when USB flash drives became more popular. You can store like 1 million times the information on those things :D
I may look into getting an external floppy drive, because I have a huge collection of floppies that have all kinds of old, 8-bit type games on them. |
google 'abandonware'.
Thank me later. When you discover that these old games won't work on later windowses, get yourself a Dell GX1 with a Voodoo III like I have done. It's great :D. And I use the floppies only to install old computers. Haven't got a clue what else I should use them for |
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I really don't know what else you'd be able to use a floppy disk for. A 3 1/2 inch disk can really only hold about 200 MB at maximum capacity. |
Hahaha, oh my goodness I'm growing old, people are forgetting about floppies :D.
A floppy can hold up to 2mb at a maximum. Usually it's just 1.38mb formatted ;). There's no way you're going to get 200mb's onto a floppy. But yes, that's all I use them for. To copy old games and software to computers who don't have access to internet themselves. |
Sorry, I meant to say 2 MB's! I guess I was thinking about something else when I wrote that
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You were thinking of loads of MB's :D.
I hated diskettes from day one. I always had problems with them. Even a new box of premium brand diskettes always had a few dead ones in them. 5 1/4" Floppies FTW! |
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