• @bfg9k
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    3010 months ago

    Older Boeing’s use floppies to update their flight computer data even today

    • Herbal Gamer
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      1910 months ago

      And Boeing is obviously trustworthy when it comes to maintenance.

    • @Emerald
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      1210 months ago

      if it aint broke dont fix it. That door plug on the other hand

      • @TwilightVulpine
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        510 months ago

        I remember using floppies and they broke a lot. Probably more than USB drives

        • @voracitude
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          410 months ago

          That’s weird, I’ve always thought of floppies as pretty durable. The 3.5" ones anyway; the older larger ones were flimsier. On the 3.5" ones the little metal cover would get bent sometimes, or occasionally crushed if someone put one in a back pocket and forgot before they sat down; but in my career I’ve had a lot more thumbdrives broken off in the port than bent/crushed floppies. How did you find most of yours broke? Maybe I had an abundance of clumsy colleagues… or maybe I joined the IT workforce too late to have witnessed the tsunami of broken floppies!

          • Ann Archy
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            510 months ago

            Thumbdrives broken off in the port?? That’s some degenerate levels of sexual frustration coming to light, brother…

            • @voracitude
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              110 months ago

              Work in IT as long as I have and if you don’t learn not to judge, you at least learn not to bother judging 😋

              • Ann Archy
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                210 months ago

                Preach it, person. Sysadmin here, the job fades you to humanity.

          • @TwilightVulpine
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            210 months ago

            Bent and crushed floppies were less of a problem than simple failures of reading and writing them, which in my memory happened much more often than they do to USB drives now. I don’t see people breaking usb sticks in half that often either.