Dell to stop offering floppy drives

greenfreak

New Member
Dell saying bye to floppy disk drives

AUSTIN, Texas (Reuters) --In what may be the wave of the future, Dell Computer said goodbye to the past on Thursday when it announced it would stop making floppy disk drives standard equipment on its higher end desktop personal computers.

Austin, Texas-based Dell, the No. 2 personal computer maker, said floppy drives had been overtaken by technologies offering greater storage capacity and would become an option on its Dimension 8250 models.

Other Dell models may lose the floppy by end of the year, depending on customer response, Dell spokesman Lionel Menchaca said.

Alternatives offer more storage
He said the decision was made because technologies such as USB flash memory offer much more storage capacity than floppies and are more useful with today's mega-memory computers.

"You insert it right into the USB port, and your computer reads it just like it would read a floppy drive. The benefit is, you've got much more capacity -- instead of just 1.44 megabytes, at the low end you have 16 megabytes."

The floppy drive has been the most widely used method of transferring data between computers since the dawn of the computer age.

The first 5.25-inch floppy drive was introduced by Shugart Associates in 1976 to be compatible with International Business Machines mainframe computers, then made the transition to IBM's early personal computers.

Sony introduced the 3.5-inch diskette in 1980, and by the early 1990s the 3.5-inch floppy, with a capacity of 1.44 megabytes, had become the standard method of data transfer in PCs.

Tens of millions of computer users are familiar with "the a: prompt" as the symbol for the floppy diskette.

Research leads to decision
In the early days of computing, hard drives of 10 to 20 megabytes, the capacity of a few floppy disks, were common, and the size of computer programs was often small enough to fit on one or two floppies.

But even today's less expensive computers include hard drives one hundred times larger, and most programs are too large to run or store on a manageable number of floppy disks.

Menchaca said the decision to eliminate the floppy drive came following focus group research with customers.

"When we would ask the question to people 'do you need a floppy,' the answer to that question would be yes," he said.

"But when we asked them how long it had been since they used it, they would say six months, a year. Many couldn't remember the last time they used the floppy drive."

Apple leads the way
Dell says the floppy will first be phased out on higher end computers because those users are more likely to be utilizing flash memory, portable hard drives, and other alternative portable storage devices.

Apple Computer stopped putting floppy drives in Macintosh computers several years ago, but other PC firms, including No. 1 personal computer maker Hewlett-Packard, still offer them.

http://www.cnn.com/2003/TECH/ptech/02/07/dell.floppydisks.reut/index.html

It was inevitable but I still think it's a bad idea. I order the Dells for our company, and I'm making damn sure if the floppy drive is available, it's getting ordered. What happens to boot disks with CD ROM drivers on them? When you can't get into Windows and need to copy files to a Zip drive in DOS but can't load the drivers for it because you don't have a floppy? :grumpy:
 
Since most BIOS can be set to boot from CDRom it's not too much of a problem. However, what happens if you need to use an emergency repair disc because of, say, a virus. They are useless overall but in times of despair, keep it.

Of course, radio shack has 'em for $9.99 or something like that too.
 
Whenever we get old pc's back that are pretty much useless, I strip them for parts. I have a box of floppies and we're upgrading all of our old computers so I'm all set. Now, when they stop making motherboards with ports for the floppy connectors, then we're in trouble.
 
The first 5.25-inch floppy drive was introduced by Shugart Associates in 1976 to be compatible with International Business Machines mainframe computers, then made the transition to IBM's early personal computers.
They forgot to mention 8" floppies, the IBM 4381 shop I worked at still used them to load microcode into the cpu, it's a good thing they got rid of it, we were all out of spare diskette drives and if you go shopping for extra 8" media you get laughed at or blank stares.

I have 1 floppy drive left that moves between systems when i need it, it's hard on the mobo interface though, last time i unplugged it from the gateway a pin came with it so i guess i cant have problems requiring a floppy drive anymore :)
 
Remove it before a standard replacement is created. Smart. I gotta give it ol' Mike. He's a real genius.:rolleyes:
 
They forgot to mention 8" floppies, the IBM 4381 shop I worked at still used them to load microcode into the cpu, it's a good thing they got rid of it, we were all out of spare diskette drives and if you go shopping for extra 8" media you get laughed at or blank stares.

Damn I'm a geek, that is the same thing I thought when I first read it. The "Floppy" name came from those, not the 5 1/4 Mini disks. :rolleyes:
 
when i first heard the term floppy, i was 17 and all i could picture was some sort of stuffed animal.
 
Professur said:
Anyone else ever handle the old disk packs?

I did. Stop drive, open door after spin-down, put cover onto disk-pack, twist handle, and lift disk-pack. Replace with 'new' disk-pack, close door, and restart drive.
 
greenfreak said:
Whenever we get old pc's back that are pretty much useless, I strip them for parts. I have a box of floppies and we're upgrading all of our old computers so I'm all set. Now, when they stop making motherboards with ports for the floppy connectors, then we're in trouble.

That's what scares me. I've always got a drive or two lying around, but what happens when the mobo no longer has the port (and you can bet your ass Dell WILL remove it)?
 
HomeLAN said:
That's what scares me. I've always got a drive or two lying around, but what happens when the mobo no longer has the port (and you can bet your ass Dell WILL remove it)?

I guess D(H)ell will move over to Zip drives , thus taking away an IDE port...
 
Hey, as long as I can access and copy to external storage from a DOS prompt, I'm cool wit dat.

The other day this guy came to me with a bad hard drive (clanking and everything) and said, I heard you send the drives out for data recovery. I told him I never do, I do the data recovery myself through DOS if possible. He said he heard it from a few people, even people who work in the same place I do. I guess I should consider that a compliment. Should I start charging what normal data recovery companies charge? :D
 
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