The_Great_Sephiroth wrote:I just acquired two 250MB drives and dozens of (so far) working disks! 100MB and 250MB capacities. I am zeroing the disks one at a time for reliability testing. When done, I'll recreate the infamous partition number 4 and then I get to format it. I was thinking of BTRFS for protection as the magnetic disk surface ages and fails. What have you guys done? Maybe SquashFS or something to cram a lot onto one? Just playing here, but I loved these things back in the day and it's fun to use them again.
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name.hidden@9y84mj1 ~ $ dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/sdb bs=512
dd: error writing '/dev/sdb': No space left on device
489533+0 records in
489532+0 records out
250640384 bytes (251 MB, 239 MiB) copied, 994.56 s, 252 kB/s
name.hidden@9y84mj1 ~ $
Another good one!
Nice find!
1clue wrote:I don't know if any official study was ever done, but I suspect that in a comparison of data storage over time, modified by quality expectations at the time of use, that zip disks might be the worst data storage medium ever produced.
Our requirements and expectations for data integrity and system reliability have increased over time, but even with the loose expectations of quality from the floppy disk era, I can think of no storage media or drives which inspired more rage in users.
Couple this with two support lines that each told you to call the other one, and a company intent on selling as many drives and disks as possible with full knowledge that many of them would not work, and no intention of ever fixing them.
I'm surprised that every last member of the board of directors didn't do prison time. A board of directors exists specifically to prevent this type of thing.
Although that was a slightly different day and age, I've learned that with most corporations, the
only thing a BoD exists for is to increase profit and share profits.
If they do anything else, it's basically a side bonus.
1clue wrote:If you used computers when zip disks were in widespread use you could hardly have remained ignorant of the problems. It was on mainstream news a lot.
Indeed. It was how Steve Gibson got a little claim to fame when he developed SpinRite.
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Interestingly enough, I, too, have a couple of these drives - one is a SCSI and the other a Parallel port. Never thought to check them out (and the disks I have are also old *100MB, with a pair of 250MB, but if I kept them, the last time they were accessed they still worked as of then).
Might make for an interesting project one weekend
