pull down to refresh

reply
Yes, its a pretty foolproof way of using and moving data.
reply
Magnetic storage is bad at storing data long term.
reply
That must be why the U.S. and German military used it for half a century and three decades, huh?
reply
Pretty sure they create new copies and test from time to time to mitigate this. When it was introduced, it was state of the art tech. But technically some optical storage would be better.
reply
Show me a medium where this is not true for some duration?
Also, of course there is better. But you said this was BAD. Language is important.
reply
Jazz drives were self contained.
reply
Factory produced CDs (not CD-Rs). I have music CDs produced in 1980s that still work without any issues.
reply
Also, I recall lots of damaged, scratched, unreadable CD-Rs.
Again, no one said there isn't better. One can argue that something is better without the other thing being bad. But I guess not to some people.
Hence why you make a copy.
reply
Have to say, floppy disks are hard to hack.
reply
How exactly it's harder than any other removable media?
reply
When was the last time you personally used a floppy disk drive? Do you even know how to manually unlock it?
reply
I have 3,5" FDDs somewhere laying around at home. Some years ago wanted to use them as a basis for small line following robot, as FDD has necessary components (two motors, one normal one for driving and servo one for steering) with very cool low level control interface.
What do you mean by "manually unlock"?
reply
Point made.
reply
reply
Right! Had forgotten about this feature. Compact tapes has similar thing.
reply
13 sats \ 0 replies \ @TomK 16 Jul
but hopefully they still use the fax machine, right?
reply
I wonder what are they using now? Something more secure than floppys?
reply