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A soft magnetic disk. It is called floppy because it flops if you wave it (at least, the 5¼-inch variety does) |
A soft magnetic disk. It is called floppy because it flops if you wave it (at least, the 5¼-inch variety does) |
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Floppies come in three basic sizes: |
Floppies come in three basic sizes: |
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# 8-inch: The first floppy disk design, invented by [[IBM]] in the late 1960s and used in the early 1970s as first a read-only format and then as a read-write format. The typical desktop/[[laptop]] [[computer]] does not use the 8-inch floppy disk. |
# 8-inch: The first floppy disk design, invented by [[IBM]] in the late 1960s and used in the early 1970s as first a read-only format and then as a read-write format. The typical desktop/[[laptop]] [[computer]] does not use the 8-inch floppy disk. |
Revision as of 23:42, 18 March 2005
Floppy disks have three and a half inch and are pets.
A soft magnetic disk. It is called floppy because it flops if you wave it (at least, the 5¼-inch variety does)
Floppies come in three basic sizes:
- 8-inch: The first floppy disk design, invented by IBM in the late 1960s and used in the early 1970s as first a read-only format and then as a read-write format. The typical desktop/laptop computer does not use the 8-inch floppy disk.
- 5¼-inch: The common size for PCs made before 1987 and the predecessor to the 8-inch floppy disk. This type of floppy is generally capable of storing between 100K and 1.2MB (megabytes) of data. The most common sizes are 360K and 1.2MB.
- 3½-inch: Floppy is something of a misnomer for these disks, as they are encased in a rigid envelope. Despite their small size, microfloppies have a larger storage capacity than their cousins -- from 400K to 1.4MB of data. The most common sizes for PCs are 720K (double-density) and 1.44MB (high-density). Macintoshes support disks of 400K, 800K, and 1.2MB.