home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!mcsun!uknet!keele!seq1!u0h36
- From: u0h36@keele.ac.uk (Adam Turnbull)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.atari.st
- Subject: Re: floptical advice please!
- Message-ID: <C19HMp.JIs@gabriel.keele.ac.uk>
- Date: 22 Jan 93 15:28:00 GMT
- References: <11804@uqcspe.cs.uq.oz.au>
- Sender: news@gabriel.keele.ac.uk (UseNet News Service)
- Organization: Keele University, England
- Lines: 44
- Nntp-Posting-Host: seq1.cc.keele.ac.uk
- X-Newsreader: TIN [version 1.1 PL6]
-
- Warwick Allison (warwick@cs.uq.oz.au) wrote:
- : I'd like to hear those opinions.
- :
- : I have been looking a tape back-up units, and my feeling is "old technology".
- :
- : The *ONLY* use for a tape-backup unit is using tapes to backup file.
- :
- : But a floptical could be used for less-often run programs, or other
- : files that, while they don't really need to live on my hard-disk,
- : I wouldn't want them OFF it and stuffed away on a tape somewhere.
- :
- : My current set-up is an ICD host adaptor, a SCSI drive, and power
- : supply (I opted against the "wire running from the ST's power-supply
- : set-up for just this reason: adding more devices) - what do I
- : need to add - just a floptical drive???
- :
- : Any help would be ENORMOUSLY appreciated.
- :
-
- From what I gather, the floptical would be a good choice for you.
- Although they're a bit more expensive than a tape drive (at least over
- here) they do have the advantage that you can actually run stuff from
- them - sort of halfway between a hard drive and a floppy. The disks
- themselves are pretty cheap (about #15-20 for 21 meg), and I've heard
- that 40 and 80 meg disks are in development, although if you'll need a
- modified drive for this is unclear. Oh, and of course you'll be able to
- run 720k and 1.44M floppies on it :)
-
- The fact that they are slower than floppies is all that is putting me
- off - I don't have an existing hard drive, and I don't think a floptical
- would be up to the job of running gcc/mint/tcsh/latex and whatever at a
- reasonable speed. I do like the idea of keeping related bunches of
- programs all on one disk though - just pop in the disk corresponding to
- what you're going to do tht session.
-
- : Oh, also - whatever I do, it will need to be portable to the Falcon -
- : I know the ICD adaptor will be pretty obsolete for the Falcon, since
- : it has SCSI-II built in, but I'd like to avoid buying anything else
- : that won't transport across.
-
- I think they are. It should simply be a case of plugging it in, but I
- suspect you'll need a PSU, and probably a case too.
-
- Adam
-