The archivist preserving decaying floppy disks

popsci.com

67 points by Brajeshwar 4 days ago


qsera - 4 hours ago

Off topic, but do anyone else remember how a box of new 3.5 inch floppy disks smelled? That smell appeared to have disappeared from the world.

I wonder, what happened to it. Do anyone else feel the same?

Brajeshwar - 3 hours ago

I got a gift of a box of 3.5 Floppies about 10+ years ago. Dug up recently, and given each to my daughter and her neighbor friends, “Here is the SAVE icon. Keep it with you.”

I also remembered and completed the meme with a magnet stuck to the fridge.

https://xcancel.com/brajeshwar/status/2024862389850734912

JKCalhoun - 4 hours ago

Brought a dozen or so floppies I had to a vintage computer festival last year and handed them off to someone who would archive them.

As I worked in a university computer lab briefly in the late 1980's, I had "captured" a few early Macintosh viruses on a couple of floppies. The recipient of my floppy collection seemed delighted by that, ha ha.

ChrisArchitect - 4 days ago

Some previous coverage:

Oct 2025 The people rescuing forgotten knowledge trapped on old floppy disks

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45545017

jmclnx - 10 hours ago

This got me playing with an old 3.5" USB Diskette Drive I got from work on NetBSD. It works great. All I need is one of those for 5.25 diskettes :)

A long time ago I had to get a file off of a 3.5" diskette that was corrupted. Linux would panic but NetBSD just came out with the rump kernel. So I installed NetBSD and used rump. Rump crashed a few times but the system stayed up. So after a few tries I got about 80 - 90% of the document.

I miss the convenience and cheapness of diskettes.

TacticalCoder - 8 hours ago

Data decays on floppies at rest but... If I manage to read say a 5"1/4 floppy from my Commodore 64 correctly and copy it to another, NIUB (New In Unopened Box) but 30 years old floppy, will that new copy last for decades again?

Or is the medium itself damaged by time passing?

I'm asking because during Covid I dug out my old Commodore 64 and managed to read a few disks and created a copy of some that were still working.