Floppy Driver For Mac

Floppy Driver For Mac Rating: 4,3/5 6802 votes

However much you love your Mac, I’m willing to bet there’s at least one hardware feature you want to add to it—and quite possibly one or two that you wouldn’t mind losing. On my trusty old 2008 MacBook Pro, for example, I wish I had a second video-out port for hooking up a third display, and I could live without the Ethernet port. You might think picking and chosing your features like this is a pipe dream, but in a sense it’s not a million miles away from what Apple used to offer with its PowerBooks. When I got my PowerBook 1400c, it came with a (6×!) CD-ROM drive, which was obviously great for browsing CD-ROMs (Myst!

*cough* Duke Nukem!) and listening to music. Mac Christopher Phin A quick tangent: was I the only one who would painstakingly enter the track titles for the CDs I played with the Apple CD Audio Player? It helped that in those days I only owned a few CDs, but it was still a slightly odd way to spend my youth. Mp3 player for mac os x 10.5.8. (I’d forgotten as well that this app has a primitive playlist feature, letting you drag tracks from a CD into a specific order.) But if you didn’t want the CD-ROM drive, you could disengage a sprung latch, slide the whole assembly out, and then replace it with this, my latest eBay purchase: a floppy disk drive. Christopher Phin Now, to be sure, the ideal would be to have both drives at once, but the fact that you could swap them round to get the features you need still appeals to me.

What’s more, though few were made, third parties could build alternative drives, and Apple took the concept further in some models, offering a special module that made your PowerBook weigh less. How can you add something to your PowerBook to make it weigh less? Actually, it’s really simple: you could pop out either the optical drive or the battery and slot the Weight-Saving Device—essentially, an empty plastic shell—in in their place. With my new floppy drive module, though, I finally have an easy way to get stuff onto and off my PowerBook 1400.

I have some information stored on floppy disks which I made when I had a Mac duo back in 1997. I need to transfer the information in them onto my macbook pro. Floppy Emu Disk Emulator for vintage Apple II, Macintosh, and Lisa. Requiring no special software or drivers. I am fixing an old Hunter machine that seems to use powerpc and MAC floppy with unknown programm. I would like to ditch out the floppy drive to gain robustness on this machine because the floppys keep on breaking and the programm.

Floppy

I’ll get round to hooking it up to the network some time, but you can’t beat the reliability of an ol’! All I do is slip a floppy into the PowerBook then chose the DOS format—for some reason I can’t write to the Mac OS Standard-formatted disks once they’re on my Yosemite Mac; perhaps you can enlighten me why in the comments—eject it and then with the help of my trusty Iomega Floppy Plus, a USB 1.1 drive that has got me out of more scrapes than you might imagine Christopher Phin mount it on my modern Mac. I love that, 16 years after the iMac sounded the death-knell for the floppy disk, the Mac OS still has an icon for floppy drives tucked away in the system. I wish I’d had this drive when I wrote the Think Retro on the printer; to get the text written on the PowerBook off it and onto my MacBook Pro, I had to scan the printed pages and run them through Acrobat Pro’s OCR system!

It’s lovely having a floppy drive back again; there’s something deeply satisfying about slotting a disk in and hearing it thut-thut-bzzzt-thut-thut-thut away to itself. Oh, and that ha-weeeeee-vow when a Mac ejects a disk, something we were so snobby about with PC users and their manual eject buttons! Oh, here, instead of relying on me transliterating the noises floppy disks make, watch the video. I’m not suggesting Apple is wrong to have abandoned this modular approach, incidentally. It made sense then, but it doesn’t really make sense now, if only because we don’t use removable media which requires bulky drives any more. Regardless, this expansion bay system still delights me, with its pleasing chunkiness and ability to transform the abilities of a Mac.