Sony 10MFD2HDLF 2HD 3.5-Inch IBM Formatted Floppy Disks (10-Pack) (Discontinued by Manufacturer)
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It would be 700-750 MB if there were 44 MB in it A text of more than 800 pages
Although I am not sure that they would work with your keyboard, I have used them with my Roland XP-103 These work great and they cost only $80. They have a good chance of getting accepted!
You can see if your powerpoint file will fit by estimating its size.
Selected User Reviews For Sony 10MFD2HDLF 2HD 3.5-Inch IBM Formatted Floppy Disks (10-Pack) (Discontinued by Manufacturer)
It is a classic with very low failure rates. Floppy disks that are perfect. Sony is my current #1 Floppy Disk* and Thea are my Top 5 Floppy Disks The current way I do things A machine that can be used with My
Akai MPC
Ensoniq ASR-equipped *Emu SP- 10* The top 5 Sony ad campaigns - 1200
Low fail rate, good labels
Verbatim - #1 in its class Good labels of the Gold Standard - Maxell Among my all time favorites, I would have to consider Imation/3M, since they are both the best! The solid depends on the box 3M - Office Depot When office supply stores in the NYC Metro area closed, Ultra Low Failure Rate snagged 200 of these, so I got them for $5 via an Unofficial Amazon Discount* - KHypermedia - I have 2 x 25 packs and 50 total disks, with an average of two disks failing. A box of 10 used to cost $4 back in the day. Esp now has older boxes of discontinued product. Normally six packs cost six dollars, but you could find one hundred packs on sale for ten dollars. The cost of a 100-pack for Sony or Verbatim has gone up to $100. 2 packs of 25/KHypermedia I purchased a year ago cost me $20 apiece. Although floppy disks are outdated media formats, I prefer to use them because they organize my beats, can be recorded directly into Pro Tools, and are easy to move around. Make sure that it is flipped and saved on floppy disk. Show boxes are my favorite. I have 1000s of them stacked up. Hard cardboard & durable plastic are the best. Top of the line. It was a great experience with Sony.
There are three-one-half hours in the day The half-way mark I started using them shortly after they were released and I was amazed at their power. I have 7 megs and they are very good This is a very reliable source of information. Firstly, I would like to point out that They were highly reliable and also came in 44 meg sizes. One thumb up The introduction of "drives" led to a decrease in the use of floppy disks, which became extremely Although these Sony disks are reliable and follow Sony's tradition of quality, they follow in the tradition of the brand. Although they may be out of production, I think they are still a good buy It is unfortunate. Please keep reading. I'm Mike.
The fact that the IBM formatted floppy disks were available on Amazon was a welcome relief, especially since there were so few sources left. In spite of the fast decline in the number of computers in use, and the fact that Sony Mavica floppy disk cameras remain in widespread use, the need for fresh, new disks remains, no matter how rapidly it may disappear. I'm inclined to believe that the quality has dropped a bit over the last few years, since each of the many boxes I bought had one or two defective disks that would not read or write no matter what I did. Although it was still a bargain, it was still quite a deal.
I purchased these for some nostalgic posterity since I took a few of these to elementary school when I was in grade school. Though I am still looking for a Floppy drive with SATA connector. All items arrived in the blue box shrink wrapped, just as in the pictures. A copyright date of 1995 appears on the box.
Each time I get my hands on a brand new pack of floppy disks, I usually find that at least a few floppies will not work regardless of I haven't tried any other floppy disks since I got SONY's pack, but I find that they all work! The box contained exactly the same floppy disks - they all worked!.
As you can see, they are high-quality The 1. floppies are natively compatible with density floppies. A 44MB drive will work, and fewer density formats may be able to be used.
CDs can store more data and are going out of stock because they are out of stock. However, to us old-timers they are still in use.
They were new old stock from the 90's, but were still sealed in the box, and all worked perfectly. I had no problems The box appeared to be in good condition. There was no sign of deterioration in the storage facilities.