On Mon, 12 Jun 2000 r. 'bear' stricklin wrote:
"r.
'bear' stricklin" <red(a)bears.org> wrote:
I'm pretty sure it's just a ROM
limitation, as the SE/30 uses the exact
same floppy drive as the later IIci and others which can't read or write
the older GCR-type disks.
Huh? My IIci reads and writes 400K and 800K GCR disks with no problems
whatsoever. As does my SE/30.
Huh, indeed. I must have misremembered the list. PowerMacs certainly won't
do it, and I was pretty sure that most, if not all, of the '90s Macs
wouldn't either.
I don't know where you got this misinformation from, but Power Macs do support
800K floppies (apart from recent models which don't have a floppy drive and
perhaps the G3 models).
Every Mac previous to the Power Macs also supports 800K floppies (apart from
the very earliest ones which only had 400K drives).
See the "Power Macintosh 7600 Series: Technical Specifications" at
http://til.info.apple.com/techinfo.nsf/artnum/n19545
Other Technical Specifications documents on the TIL site for other Power Mac
series computers also contain this text:
* Internal Apple SuperDrive floppy disk drive
-- Accepts high-density 1.4MB disks and 800K disks
-- Reads, writes, and formats Macintosh, Windows, MS-DOS, OS/2, and ProDOS
disks
Also see
http://til.info.apple.com/techinfo.nsf/artnum/n19545
This has a brief explanation on why access to 800K floppies is slower under
newer Mac models.
-- Mark