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I wrote programs on the GA mini that read IBM format floppies and changed them into proper ASCII, another program that read Intel MDS II ISIS format diskettes, and a program that read & wrote CP/M format diskettes.
We had a Dynex and a Wang drive that used those on a GA16-220 mini.
£5k per drive.
The double floppy system cost about £5k too.
The first ones were in an ICL 2903 and might have been only 5MB, but yes they were in a fixed platter plus removable cartridge combo.
Backing up the removable cartridge meant you had to backup and overwrite the fixed disk, then restore it.
What could possibly go wrong?*
The next disks I used were RK05 on a PDP, also in a fixed disk / removable cartridge combo. This time the fixed disk was double the density of the removable. 2.5MB/5.0MB IIRC.
* the answer to that question was the big boss who had signed the cheque for the machine would come in and run something out of order and bugger off when he realised he'd fecked things up, leaving me to do the restores.
Behold the warranty -- the bold print giveth and the fine print taketh away.
Oh yes, it was that there EBCDIC. Converting that to ASCII was the easy bit.
It was the figuring out of the directory information & stuff that was harder.
I did a lot of EBCDIC <--> ASCII conversions, but with tape and that was quite easy once you had worked out the tape labels. No directories involved of course.
Behold the warranty -- the bold print giveth and the fine print taketh away.
You can tell it's a French computer, that bloke only has one thing on his mind!
I did that! Or something similar - IBM 3370 DASD disks, you needed good back muscles to hoick out the disks in order to change them.
"I can put any old tat in my sig, put quotes around it and attribute to someone of whom I've heard, to make it sound true."
- Voltaire/Benjamin Franklin/Anne Frank...
I did that! Or something similar - IBM 3370 DASD disks, you needed good back muscles to hoick out the disks in order to change them.
The piccie was a Bull, though it might have been sold as a Honeywell Bull.
At one place they were struggling with French documentation, so Bull's answer was to provide French lessons.
That system was never going to work, but it was very political and so they kept it switched on but doing nowt.
I remember disk packs that size though. I had to carry them around various buildings at one point. It was easier to take two so you weren't walking lop sided.
Though that left bruises on your legs.
With all the stairs in those buildings as well I didn't need to pay for a gym.
Behold the warranty -- the bold print giveth and the fine print taketh away.
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