Check out this new 2-in-1 USB key from HP, the USB Floppy Drive Key. The USB Floppy Drive Key is a useful USB gadget as it can be read as a standard USB drive or as a floppy drive. This means you can ...
The coolest concepts are always the simplest ones, and the USB Floppy Drive from designer Thomas O’Connor is no different. Shaped like an old school floppy drive, this USB drive can store a lot more ...
[gilmour509] posted a thorough gallery of a new custom-built computer and case made to look like a 1995 IBM Aptiva. While the whole build is impressive, the most clever part involves a 3 1/2″ floppy ...
Industrial and panel PCs have USB 2.0 interfaces located on the IPC, as well as the automation panel. USB drive combinations include a DVD-ROM/CDRW drive, a floppy-disk drive, and two USB interfaces ...
If you still need to use floppy disks, QPS has a new device that may interest you. It’s an external Que! USB Floppy drive. It’s light (0.68 pounds) and requires no external power supply. The 1.44 ...
YE-Data has released their YE-Data 2X USB Floppy Drive. It’s less than an inch thick, weighs less than 10 ounces, and has a suggested retail price of US$69.95. “There is not much that can be done to ...
okay, so i picked up a Mac Classic, and i went out and got a USB floppy drive, so i can put some cool games on my old Mac,<BR><BR>but i'll be damned if i can get this USB floppy drive to ...
I have a TEAC USB floppy drive. The closest I can get to an ID is "TEAC USB UF000x USB Device". The problem is that at times the drive will not correctly display the contents of the floppy disk. "dir ...
We stumbled across this picture on Imgur of an Android phone accessing a 3.5 inch floppy drive via a USB cable and it got us thinking. To date, most of the people that have enjoyed talking about the ...
Data storage mechanisms have come a long way since IBM proudly introduced the first "memory disk" in 1971. By the end of the '70s, a number of manufacturers were churning out 5.25-in. floppy disks.
It's not often that a product makes us go "but why?" then "oh I see" and then "but why?" in such rapid succession, but the HP USB Floppy Drive Key has managed it. At first glance a standard USB memory ...