20 comments

  • AkBKukU1 hour ago
    I do a lot of floppy imaging and some of my work on it has previously be discussed here[1]. I do not understand where they got the idea of &quot;there are a number of disks that the Greaseweazle struggles to capture, namely the Apple formatted disks. If you have these disks in your collection, you may need to use an Applesauce controller.&quot;<p>The Applesauce is a macOS exclusive tool that has a contingent of dedicated users. While I have not imaged a wide sample set of Apple II and 800k Mac disks specifically, from my current experience the Greaseweazle is plenty capable of reading them. I would speculate the author was trying to use an included diskdef(a flux to binary decoding definition) for an incompatible disk. The Zone Bit Recording[2] Apple drives use is irrelevant when you increase the sample rate of the controller to accomplish the same thing. Similarly C64 disk drives are also ZBR but change the clock rate instead of media speed. So do not think that this means you need multiple drives and controllers when getting into floppy imaging, you can use standard PC drives with a Greaseweazle to read and write Apple II and Mac disks as well as almost anything else.<p>I have opened an issue on their github page for this site to seek clarification on this.<p>[1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=39495973">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=39495973</a> [2] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Zone_bit_recording" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Zone_bit_recording</a>
  • felooboolooomba4 hours ago
    As a kid back then, floppies were expensive if you were using your pocket money or hard earned side hustle stash. Floppies were used, abused and reused until that dreadful bad sector. Even after the bad sector if you knew its location. But you knew the floppy time was up.<p>Kids today will newer know the feeling of unwrapping a fresh package of 10 floppies. The sound, the smell, the texture, the stickers, the formatting, the wast free space, ... as much as retail therapy is a thing, I think that was floppy therapy.
    • bartread2 hours ago
      There was a time when, for me at least, the 3.5 inch floppy seemed like the pinnacle of portable storage technology, especially as compared to the cassettes and 5.25 inch floppies I’d been used to.<p>I made regular use of 3.5 inch disks as portable storage up until, if you can believe it, 2000 when I mostly switched to Zip disks and, occasionally, CDRs. I never found CDRWs that useful.<p>Writable CD storage was always a bit of a faff to use though, whereas Zip disks behave exactly like floppies, only a lot bigger.<p>Fast forward to 2002 when I first got home broadband, and it just became easier to simply transfer files directly over the internet rather than toting disks around.<p>Not long after that cheap USB sticks started to get usefully large but, really, I’ve barely used them in 20-odd years.<p>It’s funny how, once floppies became too small for most practical uses - even though I’d used them exclusively for 10 years - I didn’t spend much time with anything else before jumping to just relying on the network for file sharing, syncing, and transfers.<p>Very occasionally I do still use them today: I’ve got an old Korg Trinity synth that uses 3.5 inch floppies for storage, and I’ve got a minty fresh box of them still hanging around in my office. I’ve also got an Amiga 1200 that uses DD as opposed to HD floppies.
      • actionfromafar1 hour ago
        The 1200 is a little weird in that it can also use HD floppies.
        • bartread40 minutes ago
          Whoa, wait, what? It can? I did not know that. Back in the day I had an A500, and only bought the 1200 decades later. Had no idea it would accept HD floppies. TIL. Thank you!
      • LargoLasskhyfv1 hour ago
        I thought <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;MiniDisc" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;MiniDisc</a> like that. But, too little too late for too much money.<p>But conceptually, haptically, optically...phenomenally!
        • bartread1 hour ago
          Yeah, it&#x27;s funny they never really took off as a data storage format the way zip disks and CDs did.<p>To me a MiniDisc would have been far better than a Zip disk but I never encountered MiniDisc used in that context. Certainly, whereas all the machines in the computer lab during my masters had Zip drives and floppy drives, making Zip the logical choice for my home PC, I don&#x27;t ever remember seeing a PC with a built-in MiniDisc drive anywhere at all - not even in computer shops.<p>Shame really. I&#x27;m sure they probably existed but maybe rarely enough that they&#x27;d classify as oddware? (HT to LGR for that piece of terminology.)
    • dghughes20 minutes ago
      The jump from 1.44MB on a 3.5 floppy to a 650MB CD was astonishing.
    • artisinal4 hours ago
      &gt; the feeling of unwrapping a fresh package of 10 floppies<p>For us floppies just appeared in the home! I think my dad took them from the office so he could work from home.
    • mghackerlady3 hours ago
      Perhaps it&#x27;s similar to the feeling of unwrapping a pack of CD-Rs
  • Dwedit4 hours ago
    The rule for preserving floppies is to <i>not use Windows</i>. Windows is known for automatically writing to disks, so you&#x27;re not preserving the original anymore, you&#x27;re preserving the changes that Windows made to the disk.
    • jchw44 minutes ago
      If you&#x27;re using Kryoflux or a similar controller solution (and they mention several) it should bypass this problem since then the drive doesn&#x27;t show up as a normal floppy drive at all. So in this case it shouldn&#x27;t matter.
    • hypercube334 hours ago
      Dont most disks have write protection? Would that not be sufficient?
      • anjackson2 hours ago
        Unfortunately, some USB floppy drives ignore the read-write tab. It&#x27;s not enforced at the hardware level.
  • tmountain8 hours ago
    Floppy disks were ubiquitous when I was in college. When I got into Linux, I did an experiment raw writing zeros to floppies with dd to see what percentage of them had I&#x2F;O errors. I tested with a stack of about 50 of them that were left in our computer lab over the years (different brands). The failure rate was staggering. Something like 30-40% of them had bad sectors. After that, I realized that I could never rely on them as a storage medium for anything important without regular backups.
    • pdw7 hours ago
      Floppy reliability dropped of a cliff in the mid-90s. It came to a point where it wasn&#x27;t unusual to see I&#x2F;O errors even on completely new floppies.<p>But with older drives and older media, produced to a higher standard, they were pretty reliable. (After all, IBM invented them to store CPU microcode, they had to be.)
    • HPsquared8 hours ago
      I wonder if anyone made an error correcting driver or file format for unreliable data storage like this. Did anyone ever implement RAId (redundant array of independent diskettes)? Edit: apparently RAR had an option to add internal error correction data to the archive, and you can also use PAR2 files for another layer (I think that&#x27;s able to reconstruct the archive if one file is totally unreadable)
    • 6LLvveMx2koXfwn7 hours ago
      . . . simultaneously over-writing the last remaining copy of the original Linux!
  • SilverBirch6 hours ago
    Don&#x27;t copy that floppy! - <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=up863eQKGUI" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=up863eQKGUI</a>
    • evandena1 hour ago
      I love watching old Computer Chronicals episodes and seeing that warning from the Software Publishers Association.
  • djmips8 hours ago
    I can&#x27;t afford an the recommended Applesauce for Apple II disk preservation so I&#x27;m hoping that the Adafruit work which added Apple II drive support will work for me.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;adafruit&#x2F;Adafruit_Floppy" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;adafruit&#x2F;Adafruit_Floppy</a>
  • Balooga1 hour ago
    FYI; In South Africa, the 5 1&#x2F;4 inch is a &quot;floppy&quot;. The 3 1&#x2F;2 inch is a &quot;stiffy&quot;. I don&#x27;t understand why this isn&#x27;t so everywhere.
    • mikestew1 hour ago
      Colloquially it might be correct, but not technically correct. The “floppy” part never referred to the casing, but the media inside.
  • mune2gu-chan11 hours ago
    It&#x27;s easy to forget that preserving digital data often comes down to keeping aging physical media alive. Nice practical guide.
    • jandrese10 hours ago
      Generally it&#x27;s easier to just copy the data to each new media as you adopt it. In the past this was pretty easy to do as the hard drive held way more data than the floppy disks of old. The next hard drive was an order of magnitude larger than the old one, and so on. Unfortunately this sputtered out during the SSD transition and became even more ephemeral as people started putting data in the cloud where it will eventually be wiped when the accounts stop being paid or lost when the company goes under.
      • st_goliath8 hours ago
        &gt; The next hard drive was an order of magnitude larger than the old one, and so on.<p>Ah yes, the good old &quot;old PC&quot; folder that you would find on pretty much every Windows PC that used to have another &quot;old PC&quot; folder inside it somewhere, possibly inside an &quot;external HDD (old)&quot; folder :-)<p>Until the PC (or the HDD inside it) died surprisingly, people didn&#x27;t have backups, or the backups turned out to be burned CDs that were scratched up and&#x2F;or sat on a sun illuminated shelf for years.<p>I was at a class reunion a few years ago where it turned out, I was somehow <i>the only one</i> who still had (digital) photos from early-to-mid 2000s.<p>&gt; ... even more ephemeral as people started putting data in the cloud where it will eventually be wiped when the accounts stop being paid or lost when the company goes under.<p>Or the photos they upload gradually degrade in quality as the company repeatedly plays with re-compressing stuff to squeeze more space out.<p>People have observed old (10+ years) photos on Google Drive to start getting blurry, having weird artifacts, color banding, etc... IIRC there was an article posted on HN at one point with some particular egregious examples. Techmoan also mentioned this in a video some time ago, commenting that the same thing happened to old YouTube uploads of his from the 2000s.
        • ralferoo7 hours ago
          Hehe, I used to create a folder as some variant of &quot;Old&quot; and move everything in my downloads folder into it once or twice a year, and with a lesser frequency my documents. At one point when I realised this had got about 10 levels deep, I switched to yyyy-mm format directories instead of nesting them.<p>I also used to back up other PCs to each other somewhat regularly, and sometimes I&#x27;d end up with those files back on the original PC in a backup of another. Fortunately, when I switched to borgbackup on Windows as well [1], this massive reduplication of files became a solved problem.<p>[1] borgbackup doesn&#x27;t officially work on Windows, but I run it in WSL which does reasonably well for all the files I really care about (i.e. the stuff I&#x27;ve made). When they have particular unusual characters in the filenames, it throws up a warning for that file every time, but otherwise seems fine. I&#x27;ve never bothered investigating whether those particular files restore to the correct filename, because I know I&#x27;ve also backed up the zip file those files have come from and it&#x27;s just accidental that I&#x27;ve backed up the extracted files as well.
        • BrenBarn7 hours ago
          I still have a bunch of these called &quot;FromOld&quot;.
          • organsnyder5 hours ago
            Same! It&#x27;s in Dropbox now. I found the source from the very first code I got paid to write, back in 1998. I was 14, and mostly self-taught. One of these days I&#x27;m going to run it through static analysis and see how many security holes there were.
      • mystifyingpoi9 hours ago
        &gt; when the company goes under &gt; when the accounts stop being paid<p>I&#x27;ve never experienced such case, did you?<p>Something much more likely is for a person to drop their phone into the toilet, buy a new one, and completely lose access to their only backup which is Google Photos, because they don&#x27;t own a computer anymore and it is their only device.
        • biofox9 hours ago
          I lost the only recordings of my band when Myspace Music died.<p>At one point, I also had files on RapidShare. They probably weren&#x27;t of any value, but I have no idea what they were now.
          • crtasm5 hours ago
            In case you hadn&#x27;t heard, there&#x27;s a sizable archive here <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.org&#x2F;details&#x2F;myspace_dragon_hoard_2010" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.org&#x2F;details&#x2F;myspace_dragon_hoard_2010</a><p>and I see another collection mentioned on: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=19569865">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=19569865</a>
          • ralferoo6 hours ago
            What happened to the original files that you uploaded to Myspace?<p>Why wouldn&#x27;t you have made any attempt to preserve any of copy of your data anyway? Even if you believed the files would stay online forever, it&#x27;s surely always more convenient to use local files than re-download every time?<p>(but also sorry you lost your last physical copy of your memories, that kind of sucks and sorry if my comment comes across as quite insensitive)
          • freedomben3 hours ago
            [dead]
        • jandrese37 minutes ago
          What are you talking about? This is extremely common. Try hunting for some 15+ year old piece of obscure software or especially a driver for old hardware on the Internet and you are always hitting domain parking pages and &quot;file no longer available&quot;.
      • ant6n9 hours ago
        Dropbox has been around for a while (cue that old hacker news comment)
  • Frieren5 hours ago
    &gt; Not all red or unreadable sectors necessarily indicate failure. Many copy-protected disks include intentionally malformed sectors that cannot be read by standard logic.<p>How they know? ;)
  • nosmokewhereiam3 hours ago
    &quot;Don&#x27;t copy that floppy&quot; is deeply ingrained in my head rent-free!
  • gnabgib11 hours ago
    Where&#x27;d you get the title from? It&#x27;s just <i>Copy That Floppy!</i> (maybe +<i>Imaging floppy disks for long-term preservation</i> if it fits)
    • esafak11 hours ago
      <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Don&#x27;t_Copy_That_Floppy" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Don&#x27;t_Copy_That_Floppy</a>
      • jonathanoliver10 hours ago
        I came here just to post that link. I still have that song in my head when I hear the word &quot;floppy&quot;.
  • zf000022 hours ago
    I recall installing Slackware from floppy.
    • snarfy2 hours ago
      The file on the floppy the scripts looked for to know it was on the last disk of the set<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;irrlua.sourceforge.net&#x2F;install.end" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;irrlua.sourceforge.net&#x2F;install.end</a>
  • icevl6 hours ago
    Nice guide. I like the focus on preservation rather than just &quot;getting the files off the disk&quot;.
  • rasz2 hours ago
    If you ever want to peek at physical magnetic transitions and how that translates into bits&#x2F;bytes&#x2F;sectors get any Sigrok supported Logic Analyser and the FM&#x2F;MFM&#x2F;RLL decoder <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;raszpl&#x2F;sigrok-disk#screenshots" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;raszpl&#x2F;sigrok-disk#screenshots</a>
  • girishso5 hours ago
    Any suggestions for copying files from the old CD or DVD?
  • tclancy2 hours ago
    This is also an internal team name for the doctors in charge of preserving Elon Musk’s lineage.
  • varispeed3 hours ago
    I tried such systems in the past and the success was limited. When floppy was replaced with image reader, the device wouldn&#x27;t read half of them. But it would read the floppies just fine. I wonder if anything has changed since. I tried Greaseweazle (few versions) and Kryoflux with multiple different floppy drives.
  • yigalirani6 hours ago
    Last time that I had to use flopping disc was when the Chicago movie came out that was 2002. 24 years ago. And even that was for one off project after several years of not using it
  • demute8 hours ago
    Efficient market hypothesis applied to this topic would say that if you really do have a floppy, you should already have made a copy of it. If that’s Not the case, transform it to a punched card and be done with it.<p>The chance that one would have anything important on a floppy that is not already backed up in the year of 2026 must be close to zero.
    • officeplant2 hours ago
      &gt;The chance that one would have anything important on a floppy that is not already backed up in the year of 2026 must be close to zero.<p>Except the fact that there is still tons of old un-archived software out there in the wild because we used floppies for decades.<p>One of the greatest things about the retro computing community is when they buy or find old software they tend to try to image it and put it up on archive.org.<p>So much software has already been lost to time unfortunately.
    • RetroTechie4 hours ago
      &gt; The chance that one would have anything important on a floppy that is not already backed up in the year of 2026 must be close to zero.<p>In the case of personal files: <i>probably</i> true. Who needs 20y old tax filings.<p>But there are exceptions. For example: sometimes games were released (binary only), decades later an author dies, relatives clean out the attic &amp; flog some old computer junk on eBay, buyer goes through the stuff &amp; discovers source code for a game that was believed to be lost long ago.<p>Or a never-released book manuscript is discovered in similar fashion.<p>It&#x27;s not often, but it does happen.