Here is a stack of 3. This stack measures inches tall. To give you some perspective as we move forward, this image shows a 6-foot tall man standing in between two stacks of floppy disks. To equal 1 Gigabyte, you would need 9, KB floppy disks. As you can see, this is quite an impressive stack next to our 6-foot tall perspective man. Keep in mind that rather than including fractions of a disk, I am rounding off to the ones place when counting the number of disks.
In , when DOS was upgraded to 1. In , when DOS 2. While DOS 2. It would take 1. As you can see, while still an impressive stack, floppy disks no longer towers over our perspective man. The 3. The first variety of 3. In , the extended density 2. After looking at those huge stacks of floppy disks, having our perspective man standing next to a 1 Gigabyte thumb drive makes you really appreciate the fact that floppy disks are pretty much a thing of the past. To make sure Raymond Chen August 24, A ticket to the Windows 95 launch A limited number of seats at the Windows 95 launch were available to the product team, so there was a lottery to see who would get one of those tickets.
Paste your code snippet. Cancel Ok. William Hilsum. XP on floppies? Well, that's somehow cool I am sure I still have it somewhere, I never throw computer related stuff away! I will try to go to the attic and find it a bit later — William Hilsum.
I wanna see pics! I have a copy of MS Office 4. Thanks for doing that so I didn't have to go count :D — adric. I have a totally working USB floppy drive in my office desk drawer, and you'd be amazed by no litte use it sees these days!
Slackware Linux came on 33 disks. Mark Harrison. That was double density floppies though, not HD ones. Not sure if they would only count half :] But yes, good times swapping disks!
I managed to finish the thing on a floppy only machine. Remus Rigo. I remember Lotus SmartSuite used
0コメント