Originally posted by: Jeff7
Originally posted by: Tostada
That's just silly. On modern motherboards, the floppy doesn't "interact with the motherboard on a basic level" any more than a USB drive can. That's totally ridiculous for you to say the BIOS might "get screwed up" and not know how to use a USB device. If you're going to pull out random scenarious like that, the BIOS could just as easily get screwed up and not know how to use a floppy.
Random scenario? The fact that it's happened to me several times is why I brought it up. I had a slightly botched CMOS chip that would sometimes suffer from corruption - it'd boot up occasionally and just emit two low-pitched beeps, ask for a floppy disk with a BIOS image, and just sit there. Floppy disk was the only thing that it would look for. If it couldn't find a disk, it didn't do anything.
And if you're overclocking, risk of needing an emergency BIOS flashing increases.
As I understand it, for the computer to interact with the USB ports is more difficult than for it to interact with USB ports. Floppy disk controllers have been around a lot longer, and thus their support in the BIOS goes much deeper than USB support does.
What? Does anybody even sell CD-Rs slower than 52X anymore?
It's a simple fact that CD-ROMs are now more common in computers than floppy drives, so you might as well splurge and spend the $0.15 it costs for a CD-R. Even Taiyo Yuden CD-Rs are only $0.25. I know I use MemTest a lot, and the last 5 computers I've used it on have not had floppies. Besides, a CD boots up faster. And CDs cost less than floppies. I guess you could save the $0.15 and use an old floppy, but last time I tried to go through a box of floppies, they all had tons of bad sectors.
Who said anything about CD-R's? I haven't used a CD-R in months. Too wasteful. CD-RWs for me. I don't much care for one-use things.
I guess for me, floppies are cheaper, as in "free" - awhile ago, my dad brought home a case of the things that were out for the trash where he worked. Old, old program disks. I formatted and scandisked them all in a day or so - hooked a second floppy drive up and wrote a little batch program. So we've got a bazillion floppy disks at home - since they're so plentiful, well, just look around anywhere and you've got one.