I don't recall hearing anyone call them "microfloppies".
I still have a couple of original boxes of them here and they call
them Microfloppies right on the box.
Yes, it's the disk that is floppy, not the sleeve it comes in.. B)
I still have a couple of original boxes of them here and they call them
Microfloppies right on the box.
[...]
Yes, it's the disk that is floppy, not the sleeve it comes in.. B)
Nightfox wrote to Ogg <=-
That may be, but it was common to just call the whole thing a floppy
disk.
That may be, but it was common to just call the whole thing a floppy
disk.
I think I mentioned this before, when there were 8 inch floppies, they were called "floppy" disks. 5 1/4 were mini-floppies, until 8 inch floppies became rare, then they became floppies. When 3 1/2" floppies came around, they were microfloppies, until they became the standard.
Maybe it's regional, but I don't recall anyone ever calling the 3 1/2" ones "microfloppies". Just 3 & 1/2" floppies or 3 & 1/2" floppy disks.
I still have a couple of original boxes of them here and they call>disc-notepad
them Microfloppies right on the box.
This outfit is repurposing them this way:
https://atticjournals.com/collections/other-bookish-goods/products/floppy-
A novelty. But I wouldn't pay that much for that.
Maybe it's regional, but I don't recall anyone ever calling the 3 1/2" ones "microfloppies". Just 3 & 1/2" floppies or 3 & 1/2" floppy disks.
Re: Re: 3.5 floppies
By: Nightfox to poindexter FORTRAN on Mon Feb 16 2026 02:08 pm
Maybe it's regional, but I don't recall anyone ever calling the 3 1/2" "microfloppies". Just 3 & 1/2" floppies or 3 & 1/2" floppy disks.
I think what he meant is that was what was printed on the packaging, vs what people in the real world actually say out of their mouths when referring to said object.
Do people "call" them miniSIM, microSIM, and nanoSIM when referring to
the little cards they used to put in their phones? No, they call them
SIM cards. Doesn't mean they didn't have some other "official" name :D.
Do people "call" them miniSIM, microSIM, and nanoSIM when referring to the little cards they used to put in their phones? No, they call them SIM cards. Doesn't mean they didn't have some other "official" name :D.
That may be, but it was common to just call the whole thing a
floppy disk.
Maybe it's regional, but I don't recall anyone ever calling the 3 1/2" ones "microfloppies". Just 3 & 1/2" floppies or 3 & 1/2" floppy disks.
where we were using 'disk' for 5 1/4" and diskette for 3 1/2" so at least at one point that must have been a thing too..
I think I mentioned this before, when there were 8 inch floppies, they>rofloppies". Just 3 & 1/2" floppies or 3 & 1/2" floppy disks.
were called "floppy" disks. 5 1/4 were mini-floppies, until 8 inch
floppies became rare, then they became floppies. When 3 1/2" floppies came around, they were microfloppies, until they became the standard.
Maybe it's regional, but I don't recall anyone ever calling the 3 1/2" ones "
Rob Mccart wrote to NIGHTFOX <=-
You're right about what most people called them, but I have old boxes
of the 3 1/2" ones and it does say Microfloppies on the label.
My first real computer job was with a Honeywell-Bull VAR. They had 8 inch>floppy discs on some of their DPS mini and maimframe computers.. Looked just
Rob Mccart wrote to BOBBY <=-
I've never seen an 8 inch one. Some were probably still around when
I got into computers (1983) but likley those bigger ones were more corporate than for home use, and it was me who bought and set up
the computers at the company where I was working at the time rather
than me having to adapt to what they were using.
The weird thing was that I took a job in local government in 2017, and in the server room was one last AS/400 with an IBM PS2 model 80 running OS/2 that they used to to local tape restores. Serious Deja Vu.
My first corporate IT job was in 1991 at a home/kitchen retailer,
they ran their operations on a S/36 and 2 AS/400s. We used IBM PS/2
model 80s running OS/2. I recall an 8 inch floppy drive and floppy
Nightfox wrote to poindexter FORTRAN <=-
I've heard the US government tends to use technology for a fairly long time. If it's not broken, don't fix it.. Some years ago, I'd heard
they were still using a computer system from the 70s, though they may
have replaced it by now. And I've heard there are still some COBOL
jobs, mainly in the government for old computer systems.
The weird thing was that I took a job in local government in 2017, and> in the server room was one last AS/400 with an IBM PS2 model 80 running
Rob Mccart wrote to POINDEXTER FORTRAN <=-
I can understand not spending money to upgrade if you don't need
it but you'd think the time spent sending and receiving data
would have had those they dealt with complaining about how long
it took to get anything through them...
I can understand not spending money to upgrade if you don't need> you networked voicemail systems, you tied in a data modem. If someone
it but you'd think the time spent sending and receiving data
would have had those they dealt with complaining about how long
it took to get anything through them...
Conversely, there are solutions that just work. Back in the '90s, when
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