If you regret not living through the floppy disk era why not try this 3D printed Linux project that
Published: January 01, 0001
I'm sure this will be one for all of those who actually used floppy disks back in the day—a veritable nostalgia hit—but it's also for people like me who just about missed that era of computing. I remember computers having floppy disk drives, but by the time I was regularly using a PC, it was all CD and DVD. Now, I can get a chance to use those gloriously flat rummy star and solid little drives with open source project (via ).
Well, I can do so provided I have a 3D printer. Which I do not—bummer. And if I use Linux, which again I do not (, anyway). Still, a man can dream, and this man is dreaming of popping floppy disks into an RFID scanner. Which is what this thing is, by the way: It doesn't actually read the floppy disk, it just fits a floppy disk and scans an RFID code to boot up apps on a connected PC.
This does make the whole project seem a little less exciting. After all, you could rummy wealth just manually boot the game, or make the RFID code anything at all, not just a floppy drive. So it has a slight air of pointlessness about it. But I've never let that stop me before.
It isn't as easy as just hitting 'print' though, unfortunately. After printing the case, you have to screw on an OLED module—a neat touch that displays information about the app or game you're launching—screw it all together, hook it up to your PC, and install the RFDisk software and configure everything.
The fact that this is a Linux solution limits things somewhat, too, of course. While the OS has come a long way, in large part thanks to SteamOS, it still doesn't support anywhere near as many games as Windows does.
Still, you get to slot floppy disks in to boot modern games and apps. I'm already picturing myself rifling through my horizontally stacked and stickered floppy collection. Maybe now's time to invest in one of those 3D printers. And maybe after this project I'd move on to an to really round out the retro push.

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