Until I discovered the rabbit hole that is emulation (e.g. No big deal, the data wasn’t that important…. So there was no longer any way to read those disks. Then Mac computers stopped coming with internal floppy drives, and then I realized that I no longer had any working computers with floppy drives. A while back I tried to copy as many of my important documents to my hard drives. Many of them have disappeared over the years, but a few survived. I still have a few of my old floppy disks sitting around. HFS disks can still be read, but cannot be written after 10.5.8 MFS disks could no longer be read after OS 7 So I won’t go into the details, but the short version is:Ĥ00k floppy disks were formatted using the Macintosh File System ( MFS)Ĩ00k disks were formatted using Hierarchical File System ( HFS)ġ.4 MB disks were formatted with HFS+, and can be read on “any” 3.5 inch floppy drive, not just Apple drives. There are other sites that do a great job describing the technical aspects of the early Mac floppy drives ( here and here). … until you need to try and access read those disks years later. Anything that allowed one to put an extra document on the disk was great! Which was great back then because swapping floppy disks back and forth was terrible. And a floppy drive that managed to squeeze 400k onto a disk that normally holds 360k. My family’s first computer was the original 128k Mac.
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