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Posted in Retrocomputing Tagged amiga, atari st, disk, floppy disk, pc, PC format ← The End Of Ondsel And Reflecting On The Commercial Prospects For FreeCAD Intuition About Maxwell’s Equations → ...
Posted in Microcontrollers, Retrocomputing Tagged atari, atmega32u4, Disk drive, emulator, sd card ← Watch Winder Keeps Your Timepieces Ticking Codespaces For Embedded Development → ...
Made using a 3D printer, this microSD card reader resembles an Atari 810 floppy disk drive, and can transfer data from 8GB cards to the old Atari it’s hooked up to. Moore’s Law at work?
Not me though. I still have around 200 Atari ST/Amiga disks in the cupboard. For those of you unaware though, they were a storage format. One that, at their peak, could hold around 1.44mb of data.
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