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Art_from_Ark

(27,247 posts)
28. Do you still use punch cards?
Mon Dec 9, 2013, 08:37 PM
Dec 2013

In 1967, Walter Cronkite thought punch cards would still be in use in the 21st century. Maybe he was right?

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You may have to explain to the kids here what a floppy disk is Yavin4 Dec 2013 #1
I'd forgotten that 3.5s were called floppies too... JHB Dec 2013 #4
magnetic tapes pipoman Dec 2013 #6
Yes, but that wasn't called "floppies"... JHB Dec 2013 #9
Actually the 5 and quarter floppy is newer that the 8 inch floppy. RC Dec 2013 #16
True pipoman Dec 2013 #17
I remember 8" floppies Aerows Dec 2013 #34
I remember disks being huge platters (between 12 and 15 inches) sorta like LPs notadmblnd Dec 2013 #39
Way before my time :D Aerows Dec 2013 #41
I remember those platter stacks with the plastic cover. drm604 Dec 2013 #43
300MB CDCs didn't need washing jmowreader Dec 2013 #53
gawd we're getting old. notadmblnd Dec 2013 #56
This is how old I am... jmowreader Dec 2013 #57
I worked with those when I was in the Air Force. NaturalHigh Dec 2013 #31
All of the papers from my Master's Degree program are on 3.5 floppy discs. CTyankee Dec 2013 #10
I recently found an old box of 3.5s. Bought a reader with USB bus to transfer them JHB Dec 2013 #14
It wasn't that long ago! I started my Masters in the fall of 1998 and finished in the spring CTyankee Dec 2013 #18
Once writable CDs came around, the 3.5's days were numbered JHB Dec 2013 #20
Ah, Zip drives we hardly knew ye! You were gone so soon! CTyankee Dec 2013 #23
Yes, the 8" ones were bendy, too. tosh Dec 2013 #13
The eight-inchers were so floppy you had to put them in with both hands jmowreader Dec 2013 #52
Might want to explain what a babbage engine is and how to work one, instead Scootaloo Dec 2013 #5
Oh. Wow. GladRagDahl Dec 2013 #2
Meh, that's not a floppy disk. Rex Dec 2013 #3
Who had the magnetic pipoman Dec 2013 #7
YES! Rex Dec 2013 #8
Hey, watch that! I was driving a truck for FoMoCo when I saw my first UNIX mini with Egalitarian Thug Dec 2013 #11
There were programs for my Apple ][ that called for tapes csziggy Dec 2013 #37
I actually worked on one of these in 1973. Le Taz Hot Dec 2013 #49
I still have a USB floppy drive and a Zip drive Xithras Dec 2013 #12
If you don't have hard copies of your stuff you are SOL... CTyankee Dec 2013 #15
I have hard copies of my stuff. Still lots of people with floppy libraries though. Xithras Dec 2013 #19
Oh, yes, of course...for you I can see it...I was just thinking about my stuff... CTyankee Dec 2013 #22
It's not the files that are tough, it's the software JHB Dec 2013 #24
Yeah, I kinda figured that...it's OK, tho...I got over it... CTyankee Dec 2013 #25
I've still got some documents I created with PC Write on an XT clone csziggy Dec 2013 #40
I bet they Niceguy1 Dec 2013 #21
You should see how antiquated some of the equipment we still use in the FAA is. nt eqfan592 Dec 2013 #26
Do you still use punch cards? Art_from_Ark Dec 2013 #28
LOL! Thankfully, no. :) eqfan592 Dec 2013 #30
I wonder if some of the "high-tech" computer stuff in this video looks familiar? Art_from_Ark Dec 2013 #32
The VORs that establish airways in the National Aerospace System are actually WWII technology Major Nikon Dec 2013 #54
I thought the main reason for that was because Blue_Tires Dec 2013 #59
GPS technology is not required for IFR flight Major Nikon Dec 2013 #62
Yep. They are basically letting a lot of them just fail with no intention of replacing or repairing. eqfan592 Dec 2013 #61
Not for the most part Major Nikon Dec 2013 #63
There's at least one VOR in our airspace that i know for a fact defines an airway.. eqfan592 Dec 2013 #65
What area and what VOR? Major Nikon Dec 2013 #68
I'll PM you the info. eqfan592 Dec 2013 #70
You should see how old some of the stuff in the airplanes are Major Nikon Dec 2013 #55
I still use 5 1/4" floppies, as well as 3 1/2" - and ZIP disks too. Archival storage sucks. FMalone Dec 2013 #27
All of my old 3.5" disks have gone bad Art_from_Ark Dec 2013 #29
So did mine. All of the source code for the software MineralMan Dec 2013 #64
A big part of the problem is trying to run government on the cheap. Gormy Cuss Dec 2013 #33
It also would surprise me if the supplier of the 3.5 diskettes wasn't making a killing Blue_Tires Dec 2013 #60
Bathtub sized government has been implemented since at least reagan Cerridwen Dec 2013 #35
I have the Windows 95 Install on 3.5" floppies. lpbk2713 Dec 2013 #36
They should ask the NSA for technical support jsr Dec 2013 #38
Do AOL disks count? AuntFester Dec 2013 #42
I don't know about other parts of the federal government, SheilaT Dec 2013 #44
SABRE still runs on the same systems Recursion Dec 2013 #46
New complex systems always have problems when first implemented Major Nikon Dec 2013 #50
Bingo. It's why I use Slackware (nt) Recursion Dec 2013 #51
The issue was a lot more complicated than that Major Nikon Dec 2013 #48
Laugh away, but this actually makes sense to me. Recursion Dec 2013 #45
As a fed employee Le Taz Hot Dec 2013 #47
3.5 inch diskettes? I don't think I've used them in 20 years badtoworse Dec 2013 #58
Our SNAP and Medicaid app system is DOS based. Puzzledtraveller Dec 2013 #66
I'm a state employee. I do most of my work on paper. yewberry Dec 2013 #67
People should keep this in mind when they think about the NSA Silent3 Dec 2013 #69
I remember going to a government office in the mid 80s treestar Dec 2013 #71
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