I read in the news pages of this month's Pixel Addict magazine (worth a read although a bit pricey) that cassette sales have hit a 20 year high!
"Artists such as Arctic Monkeys and Harry Styles have helped sales reach their highest level in 20 years!"
I wish they would start manufacturing floppy disks again. That would be terrific news. Would gladly pay 1 UKP a disk."Artists such as Arctic Monkeys and Harry Styles have helped sales reachtheir highest level in 20 years!"
I hadn't heard that about cassettes, only that vinyl sales are on the up ...
I wish they would start manufacturing floppy disks again. That would be terrific news. Would gladly pay 1 UKP a disk.
I wish they would start manufacturing floppy disks again. That would beterrific news. Would gladly pay 1 UKP a disk.
You can still buy 3.5" disks from Amazon, but getting hold of 3" or 5.25" disks is very difficult.
I've bought some new-old-stock ones from ebay before and have seen big boxes full of them in a few retro computer shops. The NOS ones are pricey..and the old ones have been really unrealiable.
Actually, this has encouraged my interest in 8-bit and cassettes. I can pick up new TDK tapes at a local record store for less than a quid, and old games have (Almost without fail) worked very well.
Surprisingly, I've heard good things about microdrives :)
Actually, this has encouraged my interest in 8-bit and
cassettes. I can pick up new TDK tapes at a local record store
for less than a quid, and old games have (Almost without fail)
worked very well.
Surprisingly, I've heard good things about microdrives :)
I've just started buying original games for my spectrum on tape.
Gone are the days of cramming loads of games on a C90 :)
As for microdrives, I really hated them. So unreliable ... lost
lots of data on those, either due to the tape stretching or the
spectrum crashing and writing random crap onto the tape (even in
write protect mode).
NesQWK 1.06 < (c) 1995 NoLimits Software. Unregistered evaluation copy.
Actually, this has encouraged my interest in 8-bit and
cassettes. I can pick up new TDK tapes at a local record store
for less than a quid, and old games have (Almost without fail)
worked very well.
Surprisingly, I've heard good things about microdrives :)
I've just started buying original games for my spectrum on tape.
Gone are the days of cramming loads of games on a C90 :)
As for microdrives, I really hated them. So unreliable ... lost
lots of data on those, either due to the tape stretching or the
spectrum crashing and writing random crap onto the tape (even in
write protect mode).
NesQWK 1.06 < (c) 1995 NoLimits Software. Unregistered evaluation copy.
C90s are annoying for tape work on a computer aren't they! I spend more time fast forwarding and rewinding then actually loading or saving.
Saw a Speccy in the window of a charity shop on the IoW last year. Wish I had indulged!
I wonder if they improved at least the firmware side of things on the QL? I've been dabbling with a QL emulator on the Amiga, which uses the floppy drive natively....much nicer I'm sure.
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