the other day i was thinking i have not used my A: Drive 4 2 years, when was the last time u used yours
do u think they will stop makeing PC with a: drives???
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the other day i was thinking i have not used my A: Drive 4 2 years, when was the last time u used yours
do u think they will stop makeing PC with a: drives???
used mine just this morning to make a bios flash disk for a pc im fixing and updating ;) will be a while yet before i dont use a floppy drive :P
i use floopies all the time, perfect for spreading trojans around the campus network, no trace, no nothin
maybe my finger prints but....who the hell gives a fuck? lol
There is already a current thread about this very subject.
Apparently, scanning beyond page one is as obsolete as floppy drives themselves.
ok
i used my A: drive about a week ago
[i used a zip disk most days this week, which is still a very big floppy disk]
i86 PCs kinda need floppy drives due to the highly variable hardware combinations that could be made.
and as cds aren't rewritable they can only act as a read only boot device, which is often not ideal.
on the other hand,
macs haven't shipped with floppy drives for half a decade or so now,
new macs all have burners as standard so the cd can completely replace floppies.
why didn't you tell me before i posted :PQuote:
Originally posted by clocker@15 November 2003 - 00:22
There is already a current thread about this very subject.
Apparently, scanning beyond page one is as obsolete as floppy drives themselves.
does that mean i should cross post to that thread too?
wanna pot a link from here to there too? :lol:
If you'd like to post in the other thread we could have two identical topics at the top of page one.
Very exciting.
did not use a since i bought my comp 3 yrs ago :o
Wouldnt it be cool if floppies got replaced with a MD drive because i think they are magneteic disks and can be written and erased.Quote:
cds aren't rewritable they can only act as a read only boot device, which is often not ideal.
Quote:
cds aren't rewritable they can only act as a read only boot device, which is often not ideal.
Are you looking for a 'write to' while booting device? Sounds like a good way for a virus to be transfered to the media.
And as for CDs not being rewriteable... What's this?
http://www.princo.com/images/cdrw-s.jpg
You know when installing some software you are asked to restart the computer?Quote:
Originally posted by Virtualbody1234@15 November 2003 - 01:29
Quote:
cds aren't rewritable they can only act as a read only boot device, which is often not ideal.
Are you looking for a 'write to' while booting device? Sounds like a good way for a virus to be transfered to the media.
And as for CDs not being rewriteable... What's this?
http://www.princo.com/images/cdrw-s.jpg
the restart is needed as the software requires some 'things' to have been set up from system boot up,
to do this the install writes boot time commands on your hard disk which are run at the next boot time.
this is only possible when using a writable boot device.
so if you are operating on a machine without an OS or without a HDD
then a CD cannot provide this,
i have never heard of software received on a CRWR. have you?
that would be REALLY insecure
yes writable boot devices do provide the vulnerability of viruses or malicious users altering boot time commands,
this is why the safest way to make a software firewall is to copy a linux OS with the correct firewall rules onto a CD with references to a writable swap space on a HDD and boot it from that CD.
using an unwritable boot device poses a number of issues,
don't you boot off you hard disk? if not what do you boot from?
most cd themselves are bootables, since win 98 at least, or maybe 95. and they dont need anything written to them, they use ram drives, and write the info to the hdd boot info if need be.
Not in forever
that is ALMOST always possibleQuote:
Originally posted by Livy@15 November 2003 - 12:17
most cd themselves are bootables, since win 98 at least, or maybe 95. and they dont need anything written to them, they use ram drives, and write the info to the hdd boot info if need be.
[definetely more and more so too]
wasnt there a topic like this a couple days ago?
ahhhh yes, here it is just a couple post down
they're slightly different
this one is 'when did you last use A:'
while the other is 'do you think floppies are a thing of the past'
two questions, one peice of unfashionable hardware
I dont have a floppy disk drive in this PC. I had one, but took it out so that i could stick it in an old PC which doesnt boot from cd....just never got round to doing anything with it yet :)
i have a dual boot sys and it is essentail i use it everyday to boot linux, when the disk inst in it goes windows...
cant you just have a nice boot menu to choose from to do this?
cant you just have a nice boot menu to choose from to do this?
huh it has been a long time. like 9 months, i made a boot disc for a old computer
I wis hthey would replace a floppy drive with a zip drive