The file the floppy dropped out of was circa 1990.From what I remember, in Romania, maybe in 1985 I saw the last one.
Starting in college in the mid 70's. Punch cards, punch tape, reel to reel, cassette tape, 8'' floppies, 5.25'' floppies, 3.25" floppies, CD's, DVD's, flash drives. Of course I will not even start on the various methods of transferring data from one computer to another electronically.
What kind of Tandy.I still have an old Tandy. One day, it will be an artifact lol.
I also still have a mint Com64 with disk drive.
What kind of Tandy.
Honestly, I don't remember. I'll have to check. I believe it's on of the 1000s. I had a TRS-80 when I was a kid which I used to write my first program from scratch. It's because of this that I was able to easily adapt to visual basic as I grew older.![]()
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Probably the 1000,,, it was one of their best ones.. It has been so long ago, I have a hard time rem. every little detail as well.
Technological (audio) evolution is finally coming to cars proclaimed some pundits this morning on the news. The last cassette, as a standard feature, ended circa 2011. The pundits went on to say that the CD player, as a standard feature, is now obsolete and rapidly disappearing; being replaced by the USB drive, AUX in, and other hi-tech features.
We replaced the radio in our car a couple of several ago so that we could use a USB drive. Our CD collection was getting mangled and otherwise destroyed. I made a bare-bones MS Access program that randomly selects songs to "load-up" the USB drive. Copying MP3 Files to a USB Drive.
Attached is a "new" version of the MS Access program. It turns out that the USB device could only have (upper limit) 255 songs per folder. The manual gets you every time! So the USB flash drive has four folders, each with at least 254 songs.