3 comments

  • ChrisArchitect3 days ago
    Some previous coverage:<p>Oct 2025 <i>The people rescuing forgotten knowledge trapped on old floppy disks</i><p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=45545017">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=45545017</a>
  • TacticalCoder38 minutes ago
    Data decays on floppies at rest but... If I manage to read say a 5&quot;1&#x2F;4 floppy from my Commodore 64 correctly and copy it to another, NIUB (New In Unopened Box) but 30 years old floppy, will that new copy last for decades again?<p>Or is the medium itself damaged by time passing?<p>I&#x27;m asking because during Covid I dug out my old Commodore 64 and managed to read a few disks and created a copy of some that were still working.
    • classichasclass30 minutes ago
      It&#x27;s a bit of both, but I think the bigger issue (at least in my experience) is the magnetic flux pattern, especially if you&#x27;ve got new-old-stock media that hasn&#x27;t been written to much or physically damaged. If you successfully remaster the old floppy to a new one in good condition, you ought to get a good many years out of the new disk. Of course, it would also be a good time to <i>image</i> that floppy and store it somewhere else.<p>On the other hand, there are many good disk drive emulators for the Commodore 64 now and these can be had for fairly cheaply (like a SD2IEC with a Epyx FastLoad combination), which will avoid the whole problem. I still use floppies with my 128, but I also push disk images and programs to it with a 1541-Ultimate.
  • jmclnx1 hour ago
    This got me playing with an old 3.5&quot; USB Diskette Drive I got from work on NetBSD. It works great. All I need is one of those for 5.25 diskettes :)<p>A long time ago I had to get a file off of a 3.5&quot; diskette that was corrupted. Linux would panic but NetBSD just came out with the rump kernel. So I installed NetBSD and used rump. Rump crashed a few times but the system stayed up. So after a few tries I got about 80 - 90% of the document.<p>I miss the convenience and cheapness of diskettes.