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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#41
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#42
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On Sun, 16 Oct 2005 12:27:24 +0100, Anna Kettle
wrote: In article , says... I don't know "Conservation Resources" (I use the other big two) Who are the other big two? Probably more paper-based / museum conservation than the sort of architectural conservation you deal with - Preservation Equipment and Conservation by Design |
#43
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In article ,
Andy Dingley wrote: On 16 Oct 2005 11:29:18 GMT, (Huge) wrote: I can read any of those formats with a couple of phone calls Crumbs, that's impressive. I'd have thought you needed some kind of hardware. ![]() It's all in the whistling 8-) How about 3" floppies? Hamster disks are still quite easy. The funny little Japanese palmtop (can't remember who made it) was harder, but I think you could still get them done. The drives had a standard interface, DOS filesystems didn't vary much between platforms. The 3" floppies I know used CP/M. -- John Cartmell john@ followed by finnybank.com 0845 006 8822 Qercus magazine FAX +44 (0)8700-519-527 www.finnybank.com Qercus - the best guide to RISC OS computing |
#44
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In message , Huge
writes raden writes: In message , Huge writes raden writes: In message , "dennis@home" writes [16 lines snipped] You didn't really pay attention there did you ? As long as you have 'lektrik, all you need to do is plug it in and switch it on, the standards, obsolete or not, are internal to the computer and as long as the electronics still works will be quite readable So, here's an 8" floppy, get the data off it for me, will you? I have to say that I've never seen a laptop with an 8" floppy in it Selective snipping, dontchya lurve it ? What's selective about "As long as you have 'lektrik, all you need to do is plug it in". I can only conclude that you don't know what you're talking about. What else do you need to do with a laptop other than plug it in, switch it on and wait for it to boot up? .... assuming that nothing's failed in the meantime -- geoff |
#45
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On Sun, 16 Oct 2005 16:34:04 +0100, John Cartmell
wrote: The 3" floppies I know used CP/M. Really? What were they on ? The only 3" I've seen were the Amstrad wordprocessor and the odd Japanese palmtop. I don't even recall a CP/M system with 3 1/2" disks. The Einstein also had 3" drives, but that was some guy who'd bought a warehouse full of bankrupt stock trying to add disks to them to make them sell better. I have a feeling this was actually the same guy who later started Time computers? |
#46
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On Sun, 16 Oct 2005 18:19:35 +0100,it is alleged that Andy Dingley
spake thusly in uk.d-i-y: On Sun, 16 Oct 2005 16:34:04 +0100, John Cartmell wrote: The 3" floppies I know used CP/M. Really? What were they on ? The only 3" I've seen were the Amstrad wordprocessor and the odd Japanese palmtop. I don't even recall a CP/M system with 3 1/2" disks. The Einstein also had 3" drives, but that was some guy who'd bought a warehouse full of bankrupt stock trying to add disks to them to make them sell better. I have a feeling this was actually the same guy who later started Time computers? Amstrad CPC 6128s and so forth had CP/M on 3 inch amsoft floppies. Many conflicting formats on those, zx spectrum +3 dos, cp/m, proprietory word processor formats etc. Was it just me or were those drives so hideously unreliable it wasn't worth bothering? -- There is no reason anyone would want a computer in their home. - Ken Olson, President of DEC, 1977 |
#47
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Andy Dingley wrote:
On 16 Oct 2005 00:17:09 GMT, (Huge) wrote: So, here's an 8" floppy, get the data off it for me, will you? Or a TK50. Or a DC6150. I can read any of those formats with a couple of phone calls (also cards, paper tapes, anything 9 track) Anything later, and especially DAT from the early '90s, and you're screwed. snip Data evaporates from any medium that isn't actively spinning right this minute. If you want to keep it, you need to put it onto a NAS now and keep it on-line. As technology moves onwards, buy new hardware and copy it over about every 5 years. Fortunately Moore's Law means that anything it costs serious money to collect in the first place will be cheap to move for the first time and trivial after that. It depends. For example, about 10 years ago, I moved all my floppy collection onto CD, about 3 of them. (2 copies) I'm at the moment archiving some old CDs onto DVD at the moment, the floppy disks went onto one DVD. On line is not needed - as long as readers remain available, and you run thourough data integrity tests every so often. |
#48
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Arthur wrote:
snip long after the crows have picked our bones clean. have scientists speculated on how long it would be before avery man made thing has ..in short, turned to dust? It depends. The apollo landers will be easily visible for millions of years. Many structures, such as mines in rock, infilled with debris, will be visible until the rocks they are in are destroyed. So, billions of years. Nuclear waste dumps will have anomolous isotope readings until then too. |
#49
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Andy Dingley wrote:
On Sun, 16 Oct 2005 16:34:04 +0100, John Cartmell wrote: The 3" floppies I know used CP/M. Really? What were they on ? The only 3" I've seen were the Amstrad wordprocessor and the odd Japanese palmtop. I don't even recall a CP/M system with 3 1/2" disks. The 8256 and 8512 both had CP/M 3 (i.e. banked memory environment) supplied - you could boot that or boot directly into the supplied loco-script. For a (could be when it felt like it) CP/M system that used 3 1/2" disks I suppose you could count the Commodore 128 and 128D when equiped with a 1581 external 3.5" drive. The Einstein also had 3" drives, but that was some guy who'd bought a warehouse full of bankrupt stock trying to add disks to them to make them sell better. I have a feeling this was actually the same guy who later started Time computers? Time pre Granville technology I presume? (i.e. before they went tits up the first time). -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
#50
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In article ,
Andy Dingley wrote: On Sun, 16 Oct 2005 16:34:04 +0100, John Cartmell wrote: The 3" floppies I know used CP/M. Really? What were they on ? The only 3" I've seen were the Amstrad wordprocessor and the odd Japanese palmtop. I don't even recall a CP/M system with 3 1/2" disks. Amstrad used CP/M for the CPC 646 and the PCW 8256 series. The 'wordprocessor' had a vast arrange of software available for it including databases, spreadsheets, dtp programs, graphics design, games, and numerous programming applications because of the CP/M OS. LocoScript was the odd one out running something rather odd on top of/beside the CP/M. The Einstein also had 3" drives, but that was some guy who'd bought a warehouse full of bankrupt stock trying to add disks to them to make them sell better. I have a feeling this was actually the same guy who later started Time computers? -- John Cartmell john@ followed by finnybank.com 0845 006 8822 Qercus magazine FAX +44 (0)8700-519-527 www.finnybank.com Qercus - the best guide to RISC OS computing |
#51
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In article t,
Chip wrote: On Sun, 16 Oct 2005 18:19:35 +0100,it is alleged that Andy Dingley spake thusly in uk.d-i-y: On Sun, 16 Oct 2005 16:34:04 +0100, John Cartmell wrote: The 3" floppies I know used CP/M. Really? What were they on ? The only 3" I've seen were the Amstrad wordprocessor and the odd Japanese palmtop. I don't even recall a CP/M system with 3 1/2" disks. The Einstein also had 3" drives, but that was some guy who'd bought a warehouse full of bankrupt stock trying to add disks to them to make them sell better. I have a feeling this was actually the same guy who later started Time computers? Amstrad CPC 6128s and so forth had CP/M on 3 inch amsoft floppies. Many conflicting formats on those, zx spectrum +3 dos, cp/m, proprietory word processor formats etc. Was it just me or were those drives so hideously unreliable it wasn't worth bothering? Never had one fail! ;-) I did add a 3.5" drive to my Amstrad PCW 8256+ because of the cost of the 3" discs. -- John Cartmell john@ followed by finnybank.com 0845 006 8822 Qercus magazine FAX +44 (0)8700-519-527 www.finnybank.com Qercus - the best guide to RISC OS computing |
#52
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Ian Stirling wrote:
On line is not needed - as long as readers remain available, and you run thourough data integrity tests every so often. The last bit being key! Nearly got caught out myself like that a while ago. One of the OnStream tape drives we were using started playing up at an awkward time. My business partner was using his to do daily incrementals on his development platform, during a spell working up to a big delivery to a tight deadline. I said "no need to worry right now - you can use mine, I can live without it for a couple of weeks". That is when we found that my one was dead as well and OnStream had gone tits up! Just as well I did not need to restore anything from backup at that moment -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
#53
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On 16 Oct 2005 18:09:27 GMT, Ian Stirling
wrote: and you run thourough data integrity tests every so often. But you won't though ! If it's spinning, you have a much higher degree of confidence in its reliability. |
#54
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Andy Dingley wrote:
On 16 Oct 2005 18:09:27 GMT, Ian Stirling wrote: and you run thourough data integrity tests every so often. But you won't though ! If it's spinning, you have a much higher degree Actually, I have, twice put my entire stack of backup CD/DVDs (some 400) through a verify process - every file that read correctly originally (there were burn errors) still has the same MD5 sum. of confidence in its reliability. Spinning, RAID, with off-site backup. Inadequate insulation on the power switch puts 240VAC on +5V line, Oh dear. (one that I witnessed) However, there are some ways of killing large quantities of CD/DVD. Inadequate storage conditions, or various solvent spills nearby can rapidly destroy the disks. |
#55
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![]() "Ian Stirling" wrote in message ... Andy Dingley wrote: On 16 Oct 2005 18:09:27 GMT, Ian Stirling wrote: and you run thourough data integrity tests every so often. But you won't though ! If it's spinning, you have a much higher degree Actually, I have, twice put my entire stack of backup CD/DVDs (some 400) through a verify process - every file that read correctly originally (there were burn errors) still has the same MD5 sum. Did you read the raw data to see if the media was growing errors? If it was you can predict how long it will be before the error correction fails and you lose the data. |
#56
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dennis@home wrote:
"Ian Stirling" wrote in message ... Andy Dingley wrote: On 16 Oct 2005 18:09:27 GMT, Ian Stirling wrote: and you run thourough data integrity tests every so often. But you won't though ! If it's spinning, you have a much higher degree Actually, I have, twice put my entire stack of backup CD/DVDs (some 400) through a verify process - every file that read correctly originally (there were burn errors) still has the same MD5 sum. Did you read the raw data to see if the media was growing errors? If it was you can predict how long it will be before the error correction fails and you lose the data. No. However, I used the drive that isn't quite as good with bad disks for the tests. A lot of the more critical stuff is backed up twice, anyway. |
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