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User avatar #2 - TheIllusiveMan (01/05/2013) [-]
Shitty computer.
No optical drives?
No floppies?
No memory card readers?
Shit.
#6 to #2 - fragman (01/05/2013) [-]
who the fuck needs all that?
My tower doesn't have those either, provides more room for hard drives.
User avatar #8 to #6 - TheIllusiveMan (01/05/2013) [-]
IT people for one thing?
Current cloning/ghosting software is sub par. So I need the floppy. Rarely used, but when I used it, it earns me big cash.
Optical drives? Ah, other than media, I need to install OEM disks, software, firmware, and driver loading.
Card readers, rarely needed but to be honest, sometimes loading programs onto SD cards is more space conservative than even a flashdrive.
User avatar #18 to #8 - blasthardcheese (01/05/2013) [-]
How do you make money with a floppy drive?
User avatar #25 to #18 - TheIllusiveMan (01/05/2013) [-]
Ghosting/cloning.
Some of the best software that provides the best transfer is actually still floppy based.
Not that it is produced as floppy, but is roughly 13-15 years old I think.
And ghosting/cloning a drive costs a fortune for some people.
#9 to #8 - fragman (01/05/2013) [-]
Well I'm one of those IT people...
Floppy -> attached via USB when needed
Optical drive -> Had one installed to set up my System, removed it afterwards. Now I only have one attached via USB 3
A card reader would be useful at times because it's faster than USB 2 to copy photos from my camera. But for that I have one in my laptop and I copy them to the network storage from there.

So my question still stands...
User avatar #10 to #9 - TheIllusiveMan (01/05/2013) [-]
I really doubt you do IT. Or if you do you are losing a lot of bench time.
Yes, USB transfer is nice, and would save space.
However, USB 2.0 transfer speed is slow. 3.0 is obviously faster, but keep in mind, unless your using Extreme firewire, onboard is still the way to go.
#11 to #10 - fragman (01/05/2013) [-]
Well it's pretty specialized, I don't handle clients and servers anymore therefore my use for those things is lower. I mainly need a COM port and a rollover cable to do my work.
However, a USB 3 attached DVD drive isn't slower than an onboard drive attached through SATA 2 and the SATA 3 ports of the average mainboard are mailny used for hard drives / SSDs. And with my bandwidth it's usually not much slower to download the software I need and install from the SSD than using a CD/DVD.
User avatar #12 to #11 - TheIllusiveMan (01/05/2013) [-]
Well I stand corrected then. I suppose your method works best 'cause your not working with servers anymore.

Sadly I'm doing non-stop backups so I do need this stuff.

Truce? haha
#13 to #12 - fragman (01/05/2013) [-]
Yeah I guess so, different fields of IT mean different hardware requirements.
And after all, I use what works for me, you use what works for you.
User avatar #14 to #13 - TheIllusiveMan (01/05/2013) [-]
That's very true.
Sadly I'm screwed either way....
I'm an independent so I basically have to have everything.... and somehow fit it into an organised fashion in my car. haha.
#4 to #2 - N. Korean citizen (01/05/2013) [-]
Dude Floppys are rarely used these days and optical drives are almost useless aswell
since we got thumbdrives
User avatar #15 to #4 - kimkam (01/05/2013) [-]
er I would say optical drives are still a standard piece of equipment, I put them in every computer I build.
User avatar #5 to #4 - TheIllusiveMan (01/05/2013) [-]
Wrong.
Floppies are still occasionaly used, some of the best ghosting software is on a floppy (and is like 15 years old).
And I'm sorry, but saying optical drives are almost useless is just plain out wrong.
#68 to #5 - N. Korean citizen (01/06/2013) [-]
>implying "Best Ghosting software" don't work with usb, sata.
>implying "Best Ghosting software" is 15 years old
#69 to #68 - TheIllusiveMan (01/06/2013) [-]
Don't push it.
Don't push it.
#3 to #2 - grumpythefirst (01/05/2013) [-]
There are doors on the front. These are the kind of computers my school uses, it has card readers and floppy. No optical drives though.
User avatar #7 to #3 - TheIllusiveMan (01/05/2013) [-]
Really? I'm not seeing where it would hinge, or lock.
User avatar #111 to #7 - grumpythefirst (01/06/2013) [-]
That is the magic of it. They are to where they are hidden. Good for hiding an sd card or something.
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